Fujitsu develops hand washing AI to ensure workers scrub properly

hand washing AI
Fujitsu senior researcher Genta Suzuki washes his hands as he demonstrates AI-camera recognition technology that checks whether people follow six handwashing steps recommended by the Japanese health ministry during an interview with Reuters at the company's research and development laboratory in Kawasaki, Japan June 17, 2020. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon

TOKYO (Reuters) – Three months after the World Health Organization recommended singing “Happy Birthday” twice during hand washing to fight the coronavirus, Japan’s Fujitsu Ltd has developed an artificial intelligence (AI) monitor it says will ensure healthcare, hotel and food industry workers scrub properly.

The AI, which can recognize complex hand movements and can even detect when people aren’t using soap, was under development before the coronavirus outbreak for Japanese companies implementing stricter hygiene regulations, according to Fujitsu. It is based on crime surveillance technology that can detect suspicious body movements.

“Food industry officials and those involved in coronavirus-related business who have seen it are eager to use it, and we have had people inquiring about price,” said Genta Suzuki, a senior researcher at the Japanese information technology company. Fujitsu, he added, had yet to formally decide on whether to market the AI technology.

Although the coronavirus pandemic and ensuing economic fallout is hurting companies ranging from restaurants to car makers, for firms able to use existing technology to tap an emerging market for coronavirus-related products, the outbreak offers a chance to create new businesses.

Fujitsu’s AI checks whether people complete a Japanese health ministry six-step hand washing procedure that like guidelines issued by the WHO asks people to clean their palms, wash their thumbs, between fingers and around their wrists, and scrub their fingernails.

The AI can’t identify people from their hands, but it could be coupled with identity recognition technology so companies could keep track of employees’ washing habits, said Suzuki.

To train the machine learning AI, Suzuki and other developers created 2,000 hand washing patterns using different soaps and wash basins. Fujitsu employees took part in those trials, with the company also paying other people in Japan and overseas to wash their hands to help develop the AI.

The AI could be programmed to play Happy Birthday or other music to accompany hand washing, but that would be up to the customers who bought it, said Suzuki.

(Reporting by Tim Kelly and Akira Tomoshige; Editing by Hugh Lawson)

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