The Lie-Detecting Security Kiosk of the Future
An 色情视频 professor is developing a robotic kiosk that could help detect travelers with sinister intentions.
When you engage in international travel, you may one day find yourself face-to-face with border security that is polite, bilingual and responsive鈥攁nd robotic.鈥淭he system can detect changes in the eyes, voice, gestures and posture to determine potential risk. It can even tell when you鈥檙e curling your toes.鈥
The Automated Virtual Agent for Truth Assessments in Real Time (AVATAR) is currently being tested in conjunction with the Canadian Border Services Agency (CBSA) to help border security agents determine whether travelers coming into Canada may have undisclosed motives for entering the country.
鈥淎VATAR is a kiosk, much like an airport check-in or grocery store self-checkout kiosk,鈥 said 色情视频 management information systems professor Aaron Elkins. 鈥淗owever, this kiosk has a face on the screen that asks questions of travelers and can detect changes in physiology and behavior during the interview. The system can detect changes in the eyes, voice, gestures and posture to determine potential risk. It can even tell when you鈥檙e curling your toes."
Here鈥檚 how it would work: Passengers would step up to the kiosk and be asked a series of questions such as, 鈥淒o you have fruits or vegetables in your luggage?鈥 or 鈥淎re you carrying any weapons with you?鈥 Eye-detection software and motion and pressure sensors would monitor the passengers as they answer the questions, looking for tell-tale physiological signs of lying or discomfort. The kiosk would also ask a series of innocuous questions to establish baseline measurements so people are just nervous about flying, for example, wouldn鈥檛 be unduly singled out.
Once the kiosk detected deception, they would flag those passengers for further scrutiny from human agents.
Elkins began working on AVATAR when he was a Ph.D. student at the University of Arizona. As the deception detection project grew more advanced and more sensors were added, more data about the interviewee was analyzed.
When in the fall of 2016, his work moved with him. Here, he is in the process in completing construction of his lab where he plans to continue researching and teaching students about artificial intelligence.
鈥淲e鈥檝e come to realize that this can be used not just for border security, but also for law enforcement, job interviews and other human resources applications as well,鈥 Elkins said. 鈥淲e continue to make improvements, such as analyzing the collected data using Big Data analysis techniques that make AVATAR a potentially valuable tool across many industries.鈥
In the meantime, Elkins is looking for a government agency willing to utilize the technology in a real-world application.
鈥淎VATAR has been tested in labs, in airports and at border crossing stations,鈥 Elkins noted. 鈥淭he system is fully ready for implementation to help stem the flow of contraband, thwart fleeing criminals, and detect potential terrorists and many other applications in the effort to secure international borders.鈥