April
28,
2000
New
Research
Aimed
at
Helping
Seniors
Stay
in
Their
Homes
Longer
An
Aware
Home
project
called
"Aging
in
Place"
is
aimed
at
finding
ubicomp
technology
applications
that
will
allow
senior
adults
to
live
independently
in
their
homes
as
long
as
possible,
said
Dr.
Beth
Mynatt,
an
assistant
professor
of
computing.
Specifically,
"Aging
in
Place"
would
program
the
Aware
Home
to:
sense
and
identify
potential
crises,
and
then
automatically
contact
services
as
needed;
augment
a
senior
adult's
memory;
and
track
behavioral
trends
by
creating
social
connections
between
senior
adults
and
their
relatives.
•
Click
to
Feature
On
Aware
Home
for
Seniors
A
residential
laboratory
that
will
be
constantly
connected
via
broadband
communications
opened
April
28,
200,
to
study
how
technology
interacts
with
and
affects
domestic
lifestyle.
The
Georgia
Institute
of
Technology
Broadband
Institute
Residential
Laboratory
will
be
capable
of
knowing
the
whereabouts,
activities
and
vital
medical
profiles
of
its
inhabitants.
Thus,
it
can
effectively
use
the
always-on
communications
capability
to
enhance
lifestyle
and
family
connections.
The
three-story,
5,040-square-foot
home
will
host
a
broad
range
of
computing
and
telecommunications
research
funded
by
federal
money
and
corporate
support.
Its
design
and
construction
was
funded
by
a
$700,000
grant
from
the
Georgia
Research
Alliance
(GRA).
"Research
in
the
Residential
Laboratory
will
focus
on
the
confluence
of
communications
connectivity
and
lifestyle
computing,"
said
Broadband
Institute
director
Dr.
Nikil
Jayant.
"One
of
our
goals
is
to
discover
technology
combinations
that
can
unobtrusively
enhance
lifestyle
in
the
home
of
the
future
-
both
for
special
classes
of
inhabitants
such
as
older
citizens
and
infants,
and
for
families
in
general,"
added
Jayant,
who
is
also
a
professor
of
electrical
and
computer
engineering
and
a
GRA
eminent
scholar.
|

Future
Computing
Environments
researchers
Dr.
Aaron
Bobick,
left,
Cory
Kidd,
center,
and
Dr.
Gregory
Abowd
are
involved
in
a
Georgia
Tech
College
of
Computing
project
called
"Aware
Home,"
which
is
being
conducted
in
the
new
Broadband
Institute
Residential
Laboratory.
Photo
by
Gary
Meek
(300-dpi
JPEG
version),
3.6meg
|
The
Residential
Laboratory
includes
two
independent,
two-bedroom
living
areas.
One
will
mainly
serve
experimental
purposes;
the
other
will
host
actual
residents,
initially
students
and
eventually
an
elderly
person
or
family.
One
major
project
already
under
way
at
the
Residential
Laboratory
is
a
College
of
Computing
research
initiative
called
"The
Aware
Home."
A
team
of
researchers
is
using
the
facility
to
investigate
ubiquitous
computing,
or
ubicomp,
and
aware
environments.
This
research
pushes
the
concept
of
an
environment
where
computers
are
constantly
present,
seamlessly
integrated
and
applied
for
everyday
uses.
Aware
Home
researchers
want
to
build
an
environment
that
can
sense
the
inhabitants
by
seeing,
hearing
and
measuring
contact
through
a
variety
of
sensing
technologies,
including
video,
audio,
motion
and
load.
|

Georgia
Tech
computer
science
student
Thomas
O'Connell
checks
an
audio
router
that
enables
researchers
to
use
computers
to
control
direct
audio
output
in
the
Georgia
Tech
Broadband
Institute
Residential
Laboratory
to
one
of
eight
different
rooms.
Photo
by
Gary
Meek
(300-dpi
JPEG
version),
2.5meg
|
"We
will
be
breaking
new
ground
with
the
Aware
Home,"
said
Dr.
Chris
Atkeson,
an
associate
professor
of
computing.
"The
computer
will
be
aware
of
who
people
are
and
what
they
are
doing,
rather
than
needing
a
human
being
in
charge
of
the
remote
control,
for
example.
This
is
the
next
generation
of
computing."
Aware
Home
researchers
are
simultaneously
focusing
on
human-
and
technology-centered
studies
in
the
Residential
Laboratory.
|

Georgia
Tech
researchers
Dr.
Thad
Starner,
standing,
and
Maribeth
Gandy,
have
developed
a
gesture
pendant
that
allows
wearers
to
use
simple
gestures
to
control
electronic
devices
in
the
Broadband
Institute
Residential
Laboratory.
For
example,
the
wearer
can
point
up
to
raise
the
volume
on
the
television.
Photo
by
Gary
Meek
(300-dpi
JPEG
version),
2.1meg
|
"The
human
challenge
with
this
technology
is
as
much
a
challenge,
if
not
more
than
the
technological
challenge,"
said
Dr.
Gregory
Abowd,
an
associate
professor
of
computing.
Researchers
want
to
prevent
information
overload,
avoid
invasion
of
the
occupant's
privacy
and
create
practical
ubicomp
applications
for
the
everyday
user.
They
have
determined
the
most
important
potential
users
initially
are
senior
adults.
An
Aware
Home
project
called
"Aging
in
Place"
is
aimed
at
finding
ubicomp
technology
applications
that
will
allow
senior
adults
to
live
independently
in
their
homes
as
long
as
possible,
said
Dr.
Beth
Mynatt,
an
assistant
professor
of
computing.
Specifically,
"Aging
in
Place"
would
program
the
Aware
Home
to:
sense
and
identify
potential
crises,
and
then
automatically
contact
services
as
needed;
augment
a
senior
adult's
memory;
and
track
behavioral
trends
by
creating
social
connections
between
senior
adults
and
their
relatives.
In
the
technological
arena,
Aware
Home
researchers
are
studying
how
ubiquitous
sensing
can
give
computers
a
decision-making
context,
like
humans
have.
"Imagine
a
computer
that
knows
you
are
near
it,
knows
you
are
looking
at
it,
and
knows
who
you
are
and
what
you
are
trying
to
do,"
said
Dr.
Irfan
Essa,
an
assistant
professor
of
computing.
Researchers
are
building
a
context-aware
sensor
and
computer
that
will
perceive
things
and
interact
with
users.
Sensors
will
detect
a
user's
location,
facial
expressions
and
gestures,
for
example.
Meanwhile,
Atkeson
and
other
researchers
want
to
build
fundamental
models
of
human
behavior
to
train
computers
in
decision
making
|

College
of
Computing
faculty
member
Dr.
Elizabeth
Mynatt
has
created
digital
portraits
to
connect
family
members
to
their
senior
relatives.
Icons
surrounding
the
portrait
change
regularly
to
indicate
a
family
member's
activities
and
well
being.
Icons
change
based
on
data
gathered
by
the
"Aware
Home,"
as
well
as
input
from
the
resident.
Photo
by
Gary
Meek
(300-dpi
JPEG
version),
2.4meg
|
.
"Can
we
start
to
learn
the
preferences
and
model
the
behavior
of
people
in
the
house
by
watching
what
they
do?"
Atkeson
said.
Another
technology-centered
investigation
involves
a
system
called
the
"Smart
Floor,"
a
natural
input
device
that
can
identify
and
locate
a
person
based
solely
on
their
footsteps.
The
system
can
correctly
identify
the
user
more
than
90
percent
of
the
time.
The
system's
applications
are
in
trend
tracking,
crisis
intervention
and
security.
Finding
lost
objects
is
yet
another
tracking
and
sensing
technology
researchers
will
study
in
the
Residential
Laboratory.
The
system
uses
small
radio-frequency
tags
attached
to
various
objects
(keys,
wallets,
glasses
and
remote
controls)
the
user
wants
to
track
and
a
long-range
indoor
positioning
system
to
track
these
objects.
The
user
interacts
with
the
system
via
LCD
touch
panels
in
the
house.
The
system
guides
the
user
to
the
lost
object
using
spatialized
audio
cues
(e.g.,
"Your
keys
are
in
the
bedroom.").
Meanwhile,
other
Georgia
Tech
research
groups
will
be
conducting
studies
in
the
Residential
Laboratory.
Those
groups
include
researchers
in
the
School
of
Electrical
and
Computer
Engineering
(ECE),
the
Information
Security
Center
and
the
School
of
Textile
and
Fiber
Engineering.
Specifically,
textile
and
ECE
researchers
hope
to
collaborate
on
adding
wireless
connectivity
to
a
weavable
motherboard
designed
by
Dr.
Sundaresan
Jayaraman,
a
professor
of
textile
engineering.
Senior
adults
wearing
the
motherboard
could
send
out
signals
from
sensors
monitoring
their
medical
condition.
Other
upcoming
Residential
Laboratory
projects
include
experiments
in
wireless
multimedia,
ubiquitous
computing
and
private
telemedicine
in
the
home.
Researchers
expect
ubicomp
and
aware
technology
such
as
being
studied
in
the
Residential
Laboratory
could
work
its
way
into
the
mainstream
within
a
decade.
"The
current
technology
has
people
telling
computers
what
to
do,"
Atkeson
said.
"The
next
generation
of
technology
will
have
computers
understanding
what
people
are
doing
and
what
they
want."
|