Researchers at Northumbria University are testing and developing a range of smart digital technologies to help some of the most-vulnerable people in society live more independently.
Tools including virtual assistants, sensors, apps and off-the-shelf smart devices, such as Amazon Alexa and Google Home, are being tested as part of a ‘living lab’, bringing together researchers from across a number of faculties.
The lab at Gateshead Innovation Village – an award-winning housing development created by Home Group and designed by ID Partnership with project management by Elliott Associates – is the base for a 12-month research project examining how various digital technologies can assist vulnerable people in different ways.
These include home automation, prompts and reminders about their everyday activities, developing and maintaining their skills, and even monitoring people’s day-to-day behaviour.
The project will look to assist older people, those with mental health needs, and people with learning disabilities and autism spectrum disorder and is drawing upon expertise from academics in health, design and computer science.
Incredible social impact can be achieved through use of digital technologies that are becoming widely available to everyone and can support independence and improve quality of life
Ana-Maria Salai, a senior research assistant in the Department of Nursing, Midwifery and Health, has been living in the house at Gateshead Innovation Village for 10 months, and will stay there until August as she examines and develops a range of smart digital technologies.
. One solution that has been developed is IntraVox, which is a process that analyses data collected from the sensors and then sends a message in a familiar voice to control a virtual assistant.
This audible sending of commands makes the things that go on in the home clearer and more understandable, which is particularly important for residents that are not used to ‘smart’ technology.
“The voices on these devices such as Alexa and Google Home also sound quite synthetic,” Salai said.
“Programming these devices so that they have a human voice makes them a lot more user-friendly. These can be the voices of a family member, friend, or even a person’s carer.”
She adds: “We have also identified the benefits of developing a person’s skills using digital technologies; for example using a tablet to show a friend or family member making a cheese sandwich, giving clear instructions along the way.
“This has proven more valuable to vulnerable people who respond better to a familiar voice and face, rather than someone they don’t know on a generic tutorial video.”
Salai is currently looking at the most-effective home sensors that can detect motion and if something seems out of the ordinary, an alert can be sent to a person’s family member or carer.
The project and its findings have been well received by Home Group and now other local authorities are showing interest in Northumbria’s innovative approach to support in the home.
We are taking things that exist, and are relatively cheap to buy, but we are applying them in a way that is unique
Glenda Cook, a professor of nursing at Northumbria University, who leads the project from a healthcare perspective, said: “Incredible social impact can be achieved through use of digital technologies that are becoming widely available to everyone and can support independence and improve quality of life.
“We hosted numerous workshops, bringing together health and social care organisations, city councils, people with learning disabilities, older people and family members who act as carers. We wanted the project to be very research focused, working closely with our partners to ensure maximum impact for the customer.”
And Professor Lars Erik Holmquist from Northumbria University’s School of Design adds: “The smart home does not actually exist yet. It is still very much a myth.
“It is still something the world is aspiring to, but what we are doing here is very innovative.
“We have devised a way in which the devices can communicate with each other. For example, if it’s getting dark a sensor will pick this up and a voice on another device will say ‘would you like the lights turned on?’ This opens the ‘black box’ of the smart home and makes it much more user friendly.
“We are taking things that exist, and are relatively cheap to buy, but we are applying them in a way that is unique.”
Northumbria’s research in Integrated Health and Social Care looks at shaping interventions that have impacts on a health, educational, behavioural, economic and social basis, at local, national and international levels.