Measuring Cognitive Status from Speech in a Smart Home Environment
Kathleen C. Fraser, Majid Komeili

TL;DR
This paper explores how speech analysis in smart homes can provide continuous, unobtrusive assessments of cognitive health in aging populations, addressing limitations of traditional methods.
Contribution
It offers an overview of pilot studies on smart home speech sensing for cognitive assessment and discusses future challenges and opportunities.
Findings
Preliminary results show potential for passive speech-based cognitive monitoring.
Open-source tools can facilitate development of smart home cognitive assessment systems.
Identifies technical and ethical barriers to implementation.
Abstract
The population is aging, and becoming more tech-savvy. The United Nations predicts that by 2050, one in six people in the world will be over age 65 (up from one in 11 in 2019), and this increases to one in four in Europe and Northern America. Meanwhile, the proportion of American adults over 65 who own a smartphone has risen 24 percentage points from 2013-2017, and the majority have Internet in their homes. Smart devices and smart home technology have profound potential to transform how people age, their ability to live independently in later years, and their interactions with their circle of care. Cognitive health is a key component to independence and well-being in old age, and smart homes present many opportunities to measure cognitive status in a continuous, unobtrusive manner. In this article, we focus on speech as a measurement instrument for cognitive health. Existing methods of…
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Taxonomy
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