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That's cold: Japan tech blasts snoozing workers with AC
by Staff Writers
Tokyo (AFP) July 26, 2018

Japanese office workers hoping to nod off on the job may need to sleep with one eye open thanks to a new system that can detect snoozers and blast them with cold air.

Air conditioning manufacturer Daikin and electronics giant NEC said Thursday they have begun trialling the system, which monitors the movement of the employee's eyelids with a camera attached to a computer.

The computer can automatically lower the room's temperature if it detects dozing at desks.

"We hope to introduce this system commercially in 2020," a Daikin spokesman told AFP, adding that a trial had began this month.

The system uses Daikin's technology to automatically adjust temperatures and NEC's facial recognition technology to monitor different types of eyelid movement that suggest sleepiness.

It was developed after an initial study done by the companies on how best to keep people alert.

They tried lowering temperatures by a few degrees, increasing brightness and spraying aromas in a room while participants did simple maths for about an hour.

"Our study proved that lowering temperature is effective... especially when the early signs of sleepiness are detected," the companies said in a joint statement.

And in news likely to provide cold comfort to Japan's infamously overworked salarymen, Daikin hopes to eventually develop air conditioners that can direct cool blasts to specific snoozing workers.


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Empathetic, calm dogs try to rescue owners in distress, study finds
Washington (UPI) Jul 24, 2018
Behavioral experiments suggest dogs are prosocial and empathetic, and some dogs will help owners in distress. To better understand how dogs relate and react to humans in distress, scientists observed the responses of dogs to different stimuli and scenarios. In one scenario, researchers had dog owners either make cries of distress or hum while sitting in a chair behind a transparent door. Researchers observed the dogs' responses and measured their heart rates. In a followup experiment, re ... read more

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