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Showing posts with label Amazon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Amazon. Show all posts

Saturday, 29 August 2020

How Amazon’s new health tracker will use AI to monitor your tone of voice

Amazon may not have unlocked the secret to happiness. But with the announcement of a new voice monitoring tool called Tone, the company promises that it knows what happiness sounds like. And that—with a new gadget and a little tracking—you, too, can sound happy.



By Nicolás Rivero
Reporter
A silver Amazon Halo wristband sits next to a smartphone displaying the sleek Halo app
Humans have been wrestling with how to define happiness for eons. Can Amazon’s AI crack that nut?
Tone will be a feature on Amazon’s new wearable health tracker, dubbed Halo. Users can opt in to let it sample snippets of their speech throughout the day, or turn it on for up to 30 minutes at a time to get a detailed report on how they sounded in a particular conversation. Powered by AI algorithms designed to detect the “positivity” and “energy” in human voices, the tool purports to offer users feedback on their tone so they can improve their communication skills and relationships.
Of course, it’s hard to define fuzzy traits like positivity—and it’s an even more Herculean task to train an AI model to objectively quantify and measure them. In a blog post, Amazon simply says that “positivity” measures how happy or sad a voice sounds. But humanity (and the field of positive psychology) have been wrestling with how to define happiness for eons.
“It’s hard for me to imagine that there could be a single objective measure,” said Jim Allen, an associate professor of psychology at the State University of New York at Geneseo who writes and teaches about the psychology of happiness. Our perception of what a happy voice sounds like, he notes, varies depending on culture, gender, ethnicity, and other personal factors.
An Amazon spokesperson said that the developers had accounted for these differences by drawing on vocal samples from tens of thousands of voices from across US regions and demographic groups. A team of Amazon employees then listened to the recordings and rated the voices as happy or sad to determine “positivity” and tired or excited to measure “energy.” The model associated those emotional ratings with vocal qualities like pitch, intensity, tempo, and rhythm, which the AI uses to label users’ speech.
Training sets, however, are highly susceptible to bias from the humans who build them, as researchers have extensively documented in fields like facial recognition. That makes vetting the data, and the people who label it, very important. Amazon declined to offer any detail about the demographic breakdown of its vocal samples, or the team whose perceptions of positivity and energy form the basis for the model. “Throughout product development, we’ve focused on ensuring the data we use to train and evaluate our models accounts for all demographic groups,” a spokesperson said in an email.
In particular contexts, Allen said some version of a tool like Tone could work well. “In the hands of a skilled counselor giving feedback to a client about how they come across to other people, it could be really helpful,” he said. But, he noted, constantly monitoring yourself for signs of happiness—or worse, projecting a positivity you do not feel—has been shown to make people less happy.
Pattie Maes, an MIT professor who studies wearable technology designed to enhance people’s lives, pointed out that the AI would be more likely to return meaningful results if it didn’t try to treat happiness as a universal truth. “People have different speaking styles,” she said in an email. “I believe a personalized AI model trained on an individual’s own data would perform better.” (While Tone learns to pick out a user’s voice in a conversation, it does not calibrate its ratings to that user’s emotional baseline.)
But these approaches to boosting the model’s validity are not compatible with mass consumer tech. In its announcement blog post, Amazon medical officer Maulik Majmudar describes a gadget that comes out of a box ready to coax users into better communication. He writes about the ease with which his colleagues can turn on Tone and rehearse for a big presentation at work. Majmudar says he switches the system on before talking to his children, to make sure he’s not taking work stress out on his family.
It’s an intriguing vision for an AI-enabled future. But it might not be the one we live in right now.

Wednesday, 10 July 2019

Amazon’s Alexa will deliver NHS medical advice in the UK

The UK’s National Health Service (NHS) has announced what it claims is a world first: a partnership with Amazon’s Alexa to offer health advice from the NHS website.
By 
Photo by Dan Seifert / The Verge
Britons who ask Alexa basic health questions like “Alexa, how do I treat a migraine?” and “Alexa, what are the symptoms of flu?” will be given answers vetted by NHS health professionals and currently available on its website. At the moment, Alexa sources answers to such questions from a variety of places, including the Mayo Clinic and WebMD.
The partnership does not add significantly to Alexa’s skill-set, but it is an interesting step for the NHS. The UK’s Department of Health (DoH) says it hopes the move will reduce the pressure on health professionals in the country, giving people a new way to access reliable medical advice. It will also benefit individuals with disabilities, like sight impairments, who may find it difficult to use computers or smartphones to find the same information.
The UK’s Royal College of GPs welcomed the news, with the organization’s chairwoman, Professor Helen Stokes-Lampard, saying in a press statement that the collaboration “has the potential to help some patients work out what kind of care they need before considering whether to seek face-to-face medical help, especially for minor ailments.”
But Stokes-Lampard also warned that the scheme could have downsides. She warned that it is “vital that independent research is done to ensure that the advice given is safe, otherwise it could prevent people seeking proper medical help and create even more pressure on our overstretched GP service.”
Other experiments to improve NHS accessibility using technology have had mixed results. A partnership with healthtech firm Babylon, for example, which offers patient consultations via a smartphone app, has been criticized for gaming the UK’s healthcare system. Doctors says the app mainly attracts young, low-maintenance patients, while pushing harder and more expensive cases back to regular GPs.
It’s not clear if the new NHS answers will ever be available to Alexa users outside of the UK, or if the service will ever recommend that users seek a doctor instead. We’ve contacted the NHS to clarify these points and will update this story if we hear more.
https://www.theverge.com/2019/7/10/20688654/amazon-alexa-health-advice-uk-nhs

Experts react to Alexa-NHS partnership


AI specialists discuss the ethics of making personal medical queries via Amazon's Alexa.

Amazon Alexa-NHS partnership splits expert opinion

Woman sneezingImage copyrightGETTY IMAGES
Worried about a lump? Got a nasty cough that won't budge? Many people Google queries about such symptoms daily - but now they can get NHS advice instantly by asking Amazon's Alexa.
And the government hopes it will reduce the demand on human doctors.
But the move has split opinion among artificial intelligence (AI) experts and data ethicists.
"The sensitive data holdings of a national healthcare provider like the NHS are a form of 'critical social infrastructure'," said Berlin-based tech expert Mathana Stender.
"Yet they've been handed to a foreign company that's both a defence contractor and targeted advertiser,"
NHS GP David Wrigley asked, among other things, whether the questions asked via Alexa would be encrypted and who would store any data relating to patient queries.
Amazon has said all data would be kept confidential.
The NHS has increasingly partnered with private companies to offer access to its services.
Notably, Babylon Health, Push Doctor and Now GP all allow video appointments with GPs to be made remotely.
Babylon Health, for example, says only patients and staff involved in service provision have access to patient medical records.
It adds that all data is encrypted and held in English data centres.
Amazon said multiple layers of authentication would protect the data from UK customers and that all information would be encrypted.
Some commentators felt that the service did not present obvious risks to users' privacy.
Areeq Chowdhury, at the Future Advocacy think tank, pointed out that Alexa already responded to health queries from users.
"Now the advice (which will be better and more accurate) will come from the NHS website," he tweeted.
New Scientist's deputy news editor Jacob Aron said the "fuss" over the partnership was "ridiculous".
"It's just a Google search you talk to, and at least people will get NHS [information]."
There was another issue at stake, however. Some pointed out that Amazon is known to have major ambitions in the healthcare industry.
During 2018 the firm took a number of steps in this direction - including pairing up with Omron Healthcare to allow a blood pressure monitor to be controlled via Alexa.
A doctor shows something on a tablet computer to a patientImage copyrightGETTY IMAGES
Image captionAmazon is developing technology it says can help doctors
It also announced software that could automatically analyse electronic health records for information that could be useful to doctors.
The tool will use AI to pick out important details from medical documents - including "hospital admission notes and a patient's medical history".
Some have asked whether the NHS-Alexa partnership will allow Amazon to gather yet more data on how patients raise medical concerns.
"Is Amazon training its algorithm... on NHS patients' queries?" asked data privacy campaigner Phil Booth.
Amazon said that it would not sell products or make product recommendations based on the data collected as part of the NHS partnership.
The firm also confirmed that it would not build a health profile of users who asked Alexa health-related questions.

https://www.bbc.com/news/technology-48937663?intlink_from_url=https://www.bbc.com/news/health&link_location=live-reporting-story