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July 2003

Monitoring Mom

As population matures, so do assisted-living technologies.

By Gregory T. Huang

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Eric Dishman is making a cup of tea-and his kitchen knows it. At Intel's Proactive Health Research lab in Hillsboro, OR, tiny sensors monitor the researcher's every move. Radio frequency identification tags and magnetic sensors discreetly affixed to mugs, a tea jar, and a kettle, plus switches that tell when cabinet doors are open or closed, track each tea-making step. A nearby computer makes sense of these signals; if Dishman pauses for too long, video clips on a television prompt him with what to do next.

It's all part of a growing effort at Intel and other labs around the country to develop ways to help the elderly, and others who need assistance with everyday activities. Similar systems are in the works to monitor eating, sleeping, and medication habits in order to allow older people to live independently for longer. Researchers are even working on systems that analyze changes in behavioral patterns over time to provide early warning of aging diseases such as Alzheimer's.

High-tech systems to monitor and assist the elderly are now becoming practical, thanks to the falling prices of sensors and processors, increasingly sophisticated software, and the wide availability of high-speed Internet access. They are also becoming increasingly attractive as a business; in the United States alone, the number of people over age 65 is expected to hit 70 million by 2030, doubling from 35 million in 2000, and similar increases are expected worldwide. "You've got many large technology companies like Intel suddenly noticing the aging demographics and asking, How will our future products fit into this space?'" says Dishman, who heads an Intel-led research consortium formed last year to develop monitoring technologies.

One of the simplest, nearer-term systems is under development by Honeywell Laboratories in Minneapolis, MN. The company is testing a home monitor for the elderly in seven assisted-living facilities in Minnesota and four homes in Florida. The Honeywell system starts with cheap, unobtrusive sensors set up around the home. Four to six motion detectors on the walls, plus a switch that detects when a pillbox is opened, are wired to a communications box in a closet which sends sensor information over the Internet to a processing station. There, software being developed by Honeywell compares what's going on in the home-when a person gets out of bed, goes to the bathroom, and so forth-to patterns recorded during a calibration period.

The goal of the software is to glean a picture of the person's daily activities. Motion in the bathroom and the opening of a pillbox, for example, would tell the computer that the person is taking medication. Activity in the kitchen would indicate the person is eating or drinking. Lack of these signals at certain times, or decreased activity overall, would suggest something is wrong; the computer would then make a telephone call with a simple reminder such as "take your pills." The system could also alert caregivers, via either a call or an e-mail. Honeywell expects to sell the system in three to five years; while the prototype costs $5,000, the commercial version should cost less than $500, says Tom Plocher, the project's leader.

The Intel consortium is developing even more sensitive ways to follow the activities of elderly people. Its research goes beyond motion detectors and pillbox sensors to include things like pressure sensors on an Alzheimer's patient's favorite chair, networks of cameras, and tiny radio tags embedded in household items and clothing that communicate with tag readers in floor mats, shelves, and walls. From the pattern of these signals, a computer can deduce what a person is doing and intervene-giving instructions over a networked television or bedside radio, or wirelessly alerting a caregiver. Dishman says Intel will install the first trial systems in the homes of two dozen Alzheimer's patients by early next year.

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July/August 2003

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