You can A Fair Haired Woman Who Spins And Pulls Outdo just about anything with your smartphone—if you've got a free hand or two, of course.
Sure, there've been great strides in accessibility features for those who can't control their phones by swiping around the touchscreen interface, like built-in AI assistants like Siri or Bixby and other hands-free control options—but they depend on voice commands.
A project led by German PhD student Denys Matthies looks to give us even more hands-free control over our phones with new hardware that could send out your favorite 😬 emoji just by flashing a quick smile IRL. The tech, currently being tested in prototype form, is built into something you're probably already used to wearing for much of the day: earbuds.
SEE ALSO: There's now an animated poop-emoji keyboard and we hope you're not eating right nowThe buds are outfitted with electrodes that can detect and identify different facial muscle movements from changes in the shape of a wearer's ear canal. Those readings are then used to send input commands to the phone.
“We’re not trying to replace current input methods, just complement them,” Matthies said in an interview with New Scientist. The facial sensing buds could potentially end up as an entirely new way to control your smartphone, using a mix of voice and touch commands and even AR camera features.
The current version of the prototype can detect five expressions at a 90 percent success rate: smiling, winking, turning the head to the right, opening the mouth, and making a “shh” sound. It's not quite the entire range of human expression—what about the 🙃 emoji?—but it's a start. The system's slightly less accurate when its wearers are on the move, boasting an 85.2 percent success rate.
Matthies and his team have written at length about their work, and plan to present the prototype at the ACM CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems in Denver next month.
There's no way to know if and when the tech could make its way to your favorite brand of earbuds—and for now, Matthias told New Scientistit's still just a research project. There's no word of any partnerships yet, or if the team will strike out on their own to create the buds themselves.
But Matthies thinks the tech will be possible soon—so when you walk by someone on the street wearing earbuds and grinning at nothing in particular in the future, there's a chance they're maybe just sending out a happy text. There are worse reasons to smile, after all.
Topics Earbuds Facial Recognition
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