Computer Software decodes emotions over the phone, predicts behavior


By Eric Bland | DiscoveryNews.com

The innovative program can not only predict a caller’s emotional state, but may also diagnose a range of medical conditions.

Less than two minutes into a cell phone conversation, a new computer program can predict a broken heart -- literally and figuratively.

An Israeli company called eXaudios has developed a computer program, known as Magnify, that decodes the human voice to identify a person’s emotional state.

Some companies in the United States already use the system in their call centers. eXaudios is even testing the software’s use in diagnosing medical conditions like autism, schizophrenia, heart disease and even prostate cancer.

"When agents talk with customers over the phone, they usually focus on content and not intonation, unless the customer is screaming," said Yoram Levanon, President and CEO of eXaudios, which recently won a $1 million prize at the Demo 2010 conference. "If a customer is screaming, you don’t need the software. But if we can identify the other emotions of a customer, we can save customers and companies money."

A number of companies sell software that analyzes conversations between a customer service agent and a customer after the conversation is over. Magnify monitors a phone call in real time. The program then lists the caller’s emotions on screen.

When Discovery News’ technology correspondent’s voice was decoded using the Magnify software, the output read like a psychologist’s notebook: "Struggling to contain an inner excitement. Keeping emotions and/or creativity in check. Warm and fuzzy."

In a call center, the Magnify system then suggests various tactics to a customer service representative, depending on the needs of the company.

If a person is interested in a company’s product or service, the software suggests various ways a customer service agent can pitch it. Magnify can also tell if a person is unlikely to buy and suggest the agent end the conversation before angering the client. The program can even predict when a customer will start yelling up to one minute before it happens, said Magnify’s SVP of Business Operations, Alon Klomek.

It’s taken eXaudios well over a decade to develop Magnify, said Levanon. Magnify works by teasing apart a person voice, separating the frequencies and measuring various qualities of those wavelengths, such as their intonation and intensity.

Magnify is not 100 percent accurate, however. Between 17 percent and 24 percent of the time Magnify fails to identify a caller’s correct emotions.

"We tried to find physical rules that explained why we were wrong," said Levanon. "What we found was that there was a medical reason we were wrong."

Certain diseases have an unmistakable impact on a person’s speech. Many autistic patients require speech therapy to communicate effectively. Nearly 90 percent of Parkinson’s disease patients eventually develop some form of soft, mumbled speech.

Yoram Bonneh, an autism researcher at the Weizman Institute of Science in Israel, used the Magnify software in his work with autistic five-year-old children. Out of 80 children -- 40 previously diagnosed with autism and 40 non-autistic children -- Magnify successfully identified 85 percent of the autistic kids.

These were children with very mild forms of autism, said Bonneh. "They can speak, and when you listen to them you cannot tell a difference (between the autistic and non-autistic children)," said Bonneh. "But when you analyze their voices, you find differences that are significant, which allows us to classify a child as autistic or not."

In addition to Bonneh’s autism study, eXaudios cites other research in Parkinson’s disease, schizophrenia, heart disease and dyslexia. The company even has anecdotal evidence that they can diagnose prostate cancer by analyzing a person’s voice. According to Levanon, a person with prostate cancer has a "Grand Canyon" of missing tones that is "catastrophic to the voice."

eXaudios is not the only group that has linked a person’s voice to a medical condition. Cogito Health, a Boston-based company, already uses software originally developed by Alex Pentland of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology to diagnose depression in patients, and more recently, for patient drug compliance and post traumatic stress syndrome.

Analyzing a person’s voice to gain clues about their health and emotional state is nothing new, said Pentland. Humans do it all the time. The computer is just doing a better job at voice analysis than most people because it largely ignores content and focuses on form.

Whether a computer or human is analyzing a conversation, however, "it’s not what you say," said Pentland. "It’s how you say it."

Views: 58

Reply to This

Replies to This Discussion

interesting keisha, i can keep that in mind i appreciate that comment we all can get updates for each other its the only way to win the war

Keisha said:
James, you should seriously run your own news site like this one but perhaps more formatted to the likes of worldaffairsbreif.com as an example.

Personally I LOVE getting updates from you here about the current news because you know how to pick out whats important.

RSS

"Destroying the New World Order"

TOP CONTENT THIS WEEK

THANK YOU FOR SUPPORTING THE SITE!

mobile page

12160.info/m

12160 Administrators

 

Latest Activity

tjdavis posted a video

Austrian police raid house of man who leaked Israeli ambassador video making genocidal comments

In a new ITV documentary, Breaking Ranks: Inside Israel’s War, former Israeli soldiers describe how Gaza civilians were killed, often without warning, in an ...
1 hour ago
Burbia posted a video

WARHAMMER 40,000 | 1980's GRIMDARK MOVIE

WARHAMMER 40,000 | 1980's GRIMDARK MOVIEThis is a Concept Movie Trailer made with the help of AI. This video is created purely for fun and out of curiosity a...
2 hours ago
tjdavis favorited Sandy's discussion Sick sci-fi sex fantasy written by Epstein's first benefactor people say inspired his twisted island... before author's SON ended up arresting him
5 hours ago
tjdavis favorited Sandy's discussion Sick sci-fi sex fantasy written by Epstein's first benefactor people say inspired his twisted island... before author's SON ended up arresting him
5 hours ago
tjdavis commented on tjdavis's blog post THE ORIGINS OF THE WORLD ASSOCIATION OF SOCIAL PSYCHIATRY IN LONDON, UK IN 1964
"Tavistock Timing"
5 hours ago
tjdavis posted a blog post
5 hours ago
Doc Vega posted a blog post

The Ringside View

Down in the streets where the animals meetWhere tear gas flies and people get beatWhere…See More
10 hours ago
tjdavis posted videos
yesterday
tjdavis posted blog posts
Tuesday
Doc Vega posted a blog post

Is America on the brink of a Dire Emergency

 You might know if you have remained informed that America has been under asymmetric warfare for…See More
Saturday
tjdavis favorited Burbia's video
Nov 13
tjdavis posted videos
Nov 13
rlionhearted_3 commented on Sandy's photo
Nov 11
cheeki kea posted a photo
Nov 11
cheeki kea favorited tjdavis's blog post Propaganda,Cognitive Warfare Europes Self Destruction
Nov 11
cheeki kea commented on tjdavis's photo
Thumbnail

Sustenance

"Bacon health to the nation for one and all and stealth for operations elsewhere in the war. Yip a…"
Nov 11
Doc Vega posted a blog post

The Consequence of Loneliness: Another Missing Person Case

Chapter I“Unit 7, Unit 7. Do you read? This is dispatch!”“This is Unit 7, over!” Deputy Patterson…See More
Nov 10
Cora is now a member of 12160 Social Network
Nov 10
tjdavis's 3 blog posts were featured
Nov 10
Doc Vega's 6 blog posts were featured
Nov 10

© 2025   Created by truth.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service

content and site copyright 12160.info 2007-2019 - all rights reserved. unless otherwise noted