Advertisement
Japan
This Week in AsiaHealth & Environment

In Japan, thousands of dementia patients go missing every year – but AI could soon help find them

  • AI motion-sensing software is being trialled to locate missing dementia patients by tracking body movements such as foot-dragging and an abnormal gait
  • More than 18,000 people with dementia were reported missing in Japan last year, a problem that is only getting worse as its society rapidly ages

Reading Time:2 minutes
Why you can trust SCMP
An elderly man walks through the Ueno area of Tokyo, Japan. Photo: Bloomberg
Julian Ryall
A Japanese company is developing an artificial intelligence-based technology to identify the distinctive movements of elderly dementia patients, helping carers and local authorities to track those who go missing.

Ridgelinez, a subsidiary of technology giant Fujitsu Ltd, is partnering with the Osaka-based National Cerebral and Cardiovascular Centre Hospital and Noel, a Nagoya-based developer of AI solutions, on the project. The group started trials last month.

Fujitsu’s human-motion sensing technology is being used by Ridgelinez to create a new algorithm that “scans and identifies the gait of elderly people suffering from dementia”, a spokesman for the company told This Week in Asia.

02:51

Japan’s population falls rapidly in 2023, losing the equivalent of San Francisco

Japan’s population falls rapidly in 2023, losing the equivalent of San Francisco

Studies have shown that dementia patients tend to drag their feet or take noticeably shorter steps. The technology identifies such walking patterns as well as the movements of around 20 other parts of the body, including the head and knees.

Advertisement

Deployed via security cameras in public places and shops, the system will allow authorities or carers to locate people who have wandered off from their homes or care facilities and potentially track their movements until they can be located.

“The application of technologies like AI and advanced 3D sensing will play an important part in realising a society in which people with dementia can enjoy greater independence in their daily lives, without sacrificing their dignity or privacy,” said the Ridgelinez spokesman, who declined to be named.

“Ridgelinez is also conducting research in rule-making to ensure a robust ethical framework for new solutions and real-world implementation of the technology.”

Advertisement
Select Voice
Choose your listening speed
Get through articles 2x faster
1.25x
250 WPM
Slow
Average
Fast
1.25x