Sidebar navigation
- A generation marked
- A life-saving solution in the palm of your hand
- A new way of understanding the Universe
- A question of science
- Airborne microplastics can be found even in the worlds most remote places
- Algorithms for wind
- Amateur sleuths muscle up the science of discovery
- Are we close to the greatest discovery since penicillin
- Better Public services
- Brexit: Why EU Investment Doesnt Mean A Vote for the EU
- Britains burning question
- Building intelligence into systems allows them to make the right decision
- Call of the Wild
- Can research ethics survive a pandemic
- Children in limbo
- Complementary methods of astronomy help to discover patterns in the Universe
- Computing helps children make sense of the world and helps clinicians save lives
- Control systems are integrating renewable energy with the power grid
- Crime fighters go wild
- Diversity straining on its leash
- Dont stop moving
- Driving us closer to greener transport
- Ecology - a brand new economy
- Float to live
- From rags to environmental riches
- Fukushima
- Gravestones helping preservation
- Growing solutions for greener manufacturing
- Help smokers kick the habit
- How virtual reality could help cut crime
- Independence and violence
- Life saving NEWS
- Messages from time
- Microplastics in our homes
- Model of Light
- New Facial Palsy treatment
- New field of astrophysics is answering questions about the origins of the Universe
- New memory techniques
- New tactic in the battle against breast cancer
- Past mapped for the present
- Space technology helping earthlings to survive
- Taking a closer look at an often misunderstood material
- The Timeline Technique
- The buck stops on a shop shelf near you
- The devils in the details of the deep blue sea
- The world is our oyster
- There is something in the water
- Plumbing new depths of sustainable behaviour
- Quantum physics is powering the new tech revolution
- Revealing the secrets of the start of the Universe
- Shop til you drop
- Showing how a low carbon economy can flourish
- Transparency in global food production
- Understanding people to design better prosthetic hands and arms
- Using maths to help tackle climate change
- Virtual Reality pain management
- What does social media mean for our politics
- Why Game Theory could be the key
Researchers in the School of Computing are helping to transform lives
Artificial intelligence is helping autistic children and healthcare informatics could save patients' lives
For an autistic child, social cues can be hard to understand. But these cues – the signals we send through body language and facial expressions – are an essential part of learning to socialise and interact with others.
Honghai Liu, Professor of Human Machine Systems, is helping to provide a solution using artificial intelligence. It’s proving to have a transformative effect on autistic children’s lives.
Learning about the world
Honghai and his colleagues use special robots with vision processing. These can identify cues from young children that are on the autistic spectrum. Psychologists and specialists in this area then help characterise these cues. This enables the robots to responsively develop that young child’s social skills.
The team trialled this at a specialist school for autistic children, helping 7-10 years old appreciate the world around them. Dr Nick Savage, Head of the School of Computing at ÍÃ×ÓÏÈÉú, explains:
‘We helped these children learn social cues and learn how to socialise using robotics. They’re developing their own social cues, and learning to better identify and pick up on cues from others. And because they were interacting with a robot, they thought it was pretty cool as well!’
After a four-and-a-half-year trial, this work is paying dividends. This technology-assisted intervention has helped many children appreciate their role and their interactions in society.
We helped these children learn social cues and learn how to socialise using robotics
Dr Nick Savage, Head of the School of Computing
The robotic intervention can be rolled out more easily than working with a single, human practitioner. So each child can have more time spent on their needs. And more children can benefit. Which leaves practitioners with time to help children in other ways.
Following this trial, the European Union funded project is now set to be rolled out across the continent. Helping many children better understand the world around them.
And that’s not the only way researchers in the School of Computing are helping to transform lives.
Improving health outcomes
Being taken ill and hospitalised is an experience that can bring a lot of uncertainty and worry. But what if the medical professionals caring for you could get help in prioritising care?
Professor Jim Briggs and colleagues are using healthcare informatics to make this vision a reality. Their work that led to the nationwide adoption of the National Early Warning Score (NEWS) enables medical staff to identify the most seriously ill patients. It’s an ability that can make the difference between life and death.
NEWS enables clinicians to convert the vital sign measurements (pulse, blood pressure, temperature, etc.) that are taken regularly into a single score. The higher the score, the more ill the patient is. This helps identify those who need intervention, including being seen by a more senior doctor or the possibility of a transfer to intensive care. This is particularly useful for early identification of patients who may have sepsis.
Jim says:
‘We have created a system that can help identify which patients are at higher risk of developing sepsis, so that doctors can treat their condition earlier, which could lead to saving their life.
‘Being able to say we’re helping save lives with this work is quite a significant result.’