Big Brother-style AI smartwatches that track your routine and remind you if you've forgotten to do the shopping or brush your teeth could be a reality in just three years

  • The University of Sussex is developing a new artificially intelligent watch
  • It will know when a routine task has been left undone and provide a reminder
  • Could serve as memory joggers for the elderly and promote healthy lifestyles
  • But they could also be used to analyse consumer behaviour or track the performance of factory workers

Scientists are working on an artificially intelligent system that takes the idea of activity tracking to a whole new level. 

They want to create Big Brother smartwatches that monitor every move you make, learn your routine and flag any unusual activity.  

The new watches will know when a routine task, such as washing the dishes or brushing teeth, has been left undone and provide a 'helpful' reminder.

They could serve as memory joggers for the elderly, promote healthy lifestyles, assist in healthcare, or aid rehabilitation after injury.

But they could also be used to analyse consumer behaviour or track the performance of factory workers, one of the researchers behind the invention admitted.

Scientists are working on an artificially intelligent system that takes the idea of activity tracking to a whole new level. Pictured is the recently annoucent Samsung-Gear Sport

Scientists are working on an artificially intelligent system that takes the idea of activity tracking to a whole new level. Pictured is the recently annoucent Samsung-Gear Sport

HOW DOES IT WORK? 

Like traditional activity trackers, the new smart watch will use inputs from accelerometer sensors while adding a vital time element.

A key difference is that it does not rely on pre-programming. 

The software is able to learn about new behaviour patterns and identify consecutive episodes of activity, such as unloading the washing machine and then hanging the clothes out to dry.

If you have a sequence of activities you're supposed to do, it could remind you of the next step.

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Dr Hristijan Gjoreski, from the University of Sussex, said: 'The assembly worker usually performs some set of activities in order to assemble the product.

'This kind of device can monitor automatically what the worker is doing and remind him if he forgets to do some sort of activity.'

He added that his group was talking to companies that might be interested in commercially developing the gadget, which could be available in three to five years.

Like traditional activity trackers, the new smart watch will use inputs from accelerometer sensors while adding a vital time element.

A key difference is that it does not rely on pre-programming. 

The software is able to learn about new behaviour patterns and identify consecutive episodes of activity, such as unloading the washing machine and then hanging the clothes out to dry.

'If you have a sequence of activities you're supposed to do, it could remind you of the next step,' said Dr Gjoreski.

Like traditional activity trackers, the new smart watch will use inputs from accelerometer sensors while adding a vital time element. Pictured is the Fitbit Iconic, a $300 wrist wearable that is more similar to devices such as the Apple Watch

Like traditional activity trackers, the new smart watch will use inputs from accelerometer sensors while adding a vital time element. Pictured is the Fitbit Iconic, a $300 wrist wearable that is more similar to devices such as the Apple Watch

'Current activity-recognition systems usually fail because they are limited to recognising a pre-defined set of activities, whereas of course human activities are not limited and change with time.'

With existing activity tracker technology, a walk interrupted by two short stops would be interpreted as three separate journeys.

The new system would understand that in reality one walk, resuming after each short pause, is being taken.

The research will be discussed at the British Science Festival taking place this week in Brighton, and will also be presented later this month at the International Symposium on Wearable Computers in Hawaii.

Dr Daniel Roggen, head of the sensor research technology group at the University of Sussex, said: 'Future smart watches will be able to better analyse and understand our activities by automatically discovering when we engage in some new type of activity.

'This new method for activity discovery paints a far richer, more accurate, picture of daily human life.

'As well as for fitness and lifestyle trackers, this can be used in healthcare scenarios and in fields such as consumer behaviour research.'