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AI detects how seniors feel via video call

AI detects how seniors feel via video call

Published on

01 Jul 2021

Published by

The Straits Times


AI detects how seniors feel via video call

A new program will help counsellors accurately diagnose senior citizens for mental health concerns such as anxiety, stress and depression through a video call.

The counsellors will tap artificial intelligence (AI) to measure facial expressions, with the software program mapping positive and negative emotions in real time.

Developed by Singapore-based company Opsis Emotion AI, the technology is being applied in a community-driven initiative targeting seniors in Singapore, with Temasek Foundation committing more than $190,000 to support the programme.

Social service agency Lions Befrienders will be piloting the program over the next two years with about 4,300 seniors.

During a live demonstration yesterday, staff from Lions Befrienders simulated a counselling session with two senior volunteers.

Their responses and facial expressions were captured on video and analysed by the software installed on a counsellor's device.

A clinical trial held in August last year, which involved about 30 participants, found that the program was up to 85 per cent accurate when compared with assessments made by counsellors who engaged the participants.

Lions Befrienders, which serves about 7,600 seniors in rental flats, said the new initiative would complement the agency's existing mental health screening protocol, and help counsellors better assess clients during virtual sessions amid the ongoing pandemic.

Lions Befrienders chairman Anthony Tay said: "The impact of Covid-19 is profound, with the suspension of programmes and services during the circuit breaker causing more seniors to feel isolated, anxious and depressed.

"We have introduced virtual counselling, but reduction in visual and auditory verbal cues may make it harder to detect emotions. The advances in artificial intelligence such as facial emotion detection will assist our staff in screening for mental health issues and enable our seniors to receive earlier and better care."

The software program works with video sources including webcams.

In cases where seniors show symptoms of severe depression, the agency will refer them to medical centres near where they live for further consultation. The centres are the National University Hospital, Changi General Hospital and the Institute of Mental Health.

Temasek Foundation deputy chairman Richard Magnus noted that the program, which measures non-verbal cues, would also help in detecting mental health concerns among reticent seniors who are not open to discussing their condition.

He said: "We are culturally shy to share our mental health problems. Our resilient seniors, especially, keep this condition away from their children so as not to burden them. Facial emotion analysis has tremendous potential to help us detect mental health issues accurately and address them early."

During the pilot phase, which begins this month, social workers, counsellors and case managers from Lions Befrienders will test-bed the program during one-to-one and group counselling sessions, as well as community screenings.

Counsellor Stephen Ong, who has five years of experience in the field and joined Lions Befrienders recently, said the initiative would be a useful asset in early detection of mental health issues among seniors.

"The AI will help me detect and confirm their feelings on site, allowing me to do interventions immediately, ensuring their safety," he said.

 

Source: The Straits Times © Singapore Press Holdings Limited. Reproduced with permission.


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