People, sensors, decisions

Author:

Hoey Jesse1,Boutilier Craig2,Poupart Pascal1,Olivier Patrick3,Monk Andrew4,Mihailidis Alex2

Affiliation:

1. University of Waterloo, Waterloo, Canada

2. University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada

3. Newcastle University, Newcastle, UK

4. University of York, York, UK

Abstract

The ratio of healthcare professionals to care recipients is dropping at an alarming rate, particularly for the older population. It is estimated that the number of persons with Alzheimer's disease, for example, will top 100 million worldwide by the year 2050 [Alzheimer's Disease International 2009]. It will become harder and harder to provide needed health services to this population of older adults. Further, patients are becoming more aware and involved in their own healthcare decisions. This is creating a void in which technology has an increasingly important role to play as a tool to connect providers with recipients. Examples of interactive technologies range from telecare for remote regions to computer games promoting fitness in the home. Currently, such technologies are developed for specific applications and are difficult to modify to suit individual user needs. The future potential economic and social impact of technology in the healthcare field therefore lies in our ability to make intelligent devices that are customizable by healthcare professionals and their clients, that are adaptive to users over time, and that generalize across tasks and environments. A wide application area for technology in healthcare is for assistance and monitoring in the home. As the population ages, it becomes increasingly dependent on chronic healthcare, such as assistance for tasks of everyday life (washing, cooking, dressing), medication taking, nutrition, and fitness. This article will present a summary of work over the past decade on the development of intelligent systems that provide assistance to persons with cognitive disabilities. These systems are unique in that they are all built using a common framework, a decision-theoretic model for general-purpose assistance in the home. In this article, we will show how this type of general model can be applied to a range of assistance tasks, including prompting for activities of daily living, assistance for art therapists, and stroke rehabilitation. This model is a Partially Observable Markov Decision Process (POMDP) that can be customized by end-users, that can integrate complex sensor information, and that can adapt over time. These three characteristics of the POMDP model will allow for increasing uptake and long-term efficiency and robustness of technology for assistance.

Funder

Research Councils UK

Toronto Rehabilitation Institute

Alzheimer's Association

Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

Canadian Institutes of Health Research

Publisher

Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)

Subject

Artificial Intelligence,Human-Computer Interaction

Reference123 articles.

1. Optimal control of Markov processes with incomplete state information

2. Entropy Methods for Adaptive Utility Elicitation

3. Alzheimer's Disease International. 2009. World alzheimer's report. http://www.alz.co.uk/research/worldreport/. Alzheimer's Disease International. 2009. World alzheimer's report. http://www.alz.co.uk/research/worldreport/.

4. Alzheimer's Society of Canada. 2010. Rising tide: The impact of dementia on canadian society. http://www.alzheimer.ca/english/rising_tide/rising_tide_report.htm. Alzheimer's Society of Canada. 2010. Rising tide: The impact of dementia on canadian society. http://www.alzheimer.ca/english/rising_tide/rising_tide_report.htm.

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