Now where did I leave the begonia?

We love goggles, don’t we?  It’s something about eyes and identity that make them an absolute must.  Now the folks over at Pink Tentacle have caught on to another great Japanese idea - why not have yr googles do your remembering for you too?

Researchers at the University of Tokyo have developed a smart video goggle system that records everything the wearer looks at, recognizes and assigns names to objects that appear in the video, and creates an easily searchable database of the recorded footage. Designed to function as a high-tech memory aid, these “Cyber Goggles” promise to make the act of losing your keys a thing of the past, according to head researcher professor Tatsuya Harada.

Cyber Goggles are equipped with a compact camera that feeds video to a computer worn on the user’s back. The computer records the footage and relies on ultrahigh-speed image recognition processing software to analyze, name and file the objects that appear in the video. Later, when the user types in a keyword to search for a particular item, the corresponding video plays on a tiny LCD screen attached to the right-side lens, helping the user remember the location of the item in question.

In a demonstration at the University of Tokyo last week, 60 everyday items — including a potted begonia, CD, hammer and cellphone — were programmed into the Cyber Goggle memory. As the demonstrator walked around the room viewing and recording the various objects, the names of the items appeared on the goggle screen. The demonstrator was then able to do a search for the various items and retrieve the corresponding video.

In addition to functioning as a memory aid for the elderly, Cyber Goggles have a number of other potential uses, says professor Harada. For example, the image recognition processing technology can be used to sift through enormous amounts of video in search of specific images. It might also help in the development of robots with human-like abilities, he says.

The application for elderly people seems a bit of a stretch to me, but the idea of using the system to index a rolling lifelog could be pretty useful given the vast amounts of data that would be generated.

Thanks to Nicolas Léonard for the heads up!


One Response to “Now where did I leave the begonia?”

  1. yeah, Japan’s rapidly grey-skewing population is driving their exploration of robotics along nicely.

    “60 everyday items — including a potted begonia, CD, hammer and cellphone — were programmed into the Cyber Goggle memory”

    would love to know what this entails exactly. do you have to scan every new object from every angle with variable light sources before it’s “online”?

    seems to me this system would work nicely if you just tagged every object with RFIDs. you’d be up and going a lot quicker. throw an RFID scanner on those glasses and every object could be auto-tagged as you looked at it.

    definitely an upgrade on the whole “googling for your shoes” dealio