A team of student innovators known as Blue Jay just
unveiled
the latest prototype of an indoor drone that senses and shares
emotions that can be used to earn people’s trust in emergency evacuation
situations.
An Intriguing Solution to a Problem
The team of students reports that fires in nursing homes are a real risk, as
there are 600 evacuations of nursing homes in the Netherlands per year. While
these institutions have detailed plans for such emergencies, seniors can often
become disoriented and need extra attention. A shortage of nurses raises
intriguing opportunities for smart tech to help meet this need, but the
presence of a machine floating in the air is not the same thing as a friendly
human face offering the way to safety.
Photographer: Rien Boonstoppel
Emotion Sensing Drones to the Rescue
The team’s drone can sense emotions via a small camera and express them back
via eye expressions on a screen. This simple act of empathy can help seniors
feel acknowledged as well as the drone seem less robotic and make it more
likely that people will follow directions to safety. In addition, the fire
brigade can use the drone to assess the situationusing its livestreaming
capabilities. It has been developed and tested in collaboration with a group
of nursing home residents.
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Blue Jay Team Partners With NXP
The project, named
Blue Jay, is the brainchild of a group of 22 students from The Technical
University of Eindhoven in the Netherlands and involves a diverse array of
technologies ranging from AI and interactive software to hardware for
aerodynamics and electrical efficiency. The latest prototype drone relies in
large part on NXP’s hardware and software as well as NXP-organized workshops.
NXP’s partnership with Blue Jay’s annual student-led innovation projects goes
back five years.
Photographer: Rien Boonstoppel
“Smart technology needs to be not only efficient but empowering, so people
can use and trust it. Our engagement with the Blue Jay students is an
opportunity for NXP to enable student innovation and test some of our new
technology, and a chance for us to engage with potential future employees
and partners. In fact, a member from last year’s Blue Jay project team is
now working on an employee health project at NXP.
Gino Knubben, principal system engineer at NXP
See how
Mobile Robotics Ecosystems
are being used in other emergency applications.
Learn more about
Blue Jay
and NXP's history of partnership with the team: