PISCATAWAY, N.J., June 27, 2018 /PRNewswire/ -- IEEE, the world's largest technical professional organization dedicated to advancing technology for humanity, today unveiled "Generation AI 2018: Second Annual Study of Millennial Parents of Generation Alpha Kids." The survey illuminates how millennial parents in the U.S., U.K., India, China and Brazil with Generation Alpha children (eight years-old or younger), think growing up with health- and medical-related AI technology will impact the lives of their children. Born from 2010-2025, Generation Alpha is considered by many to be the most tech-infused demographic, and AI technologies are expected to infiltrate nearly every aspect of their lives. To review the survey data, and learn more about how health- and medical-related artificial intelligence technologies are benefiting humanity, please visit IEEE Transmitter http://transmitter.ieee.org/ai-2018/.
Generation Alpha Trend Watch: Babies Wearing AI Health Trackers
Experts say wearable technology will soon be able to track patient health data, and by using AI and machine learning, physicians and wearable users will then be able to gain a better understanding of changes in that patient's health. Millennial parents across the globe are most comfortable letting their Generation Alpha children use wearables to track their health starting with their teenage years (33 percent). However, more than half (58 percent) would have those ranging from as young as infancy to five years-old (including toddlers) wear them.
Kids Not Feeling Well? AI Knows Why … and How to Fix it
In the next decade AI will be even more developed, prompting clear majorities of Millennial parents in various countries to say they would have at least some trust in AI technologies for diagnoses and treatments of their Generation Alpha children.
- More than half (56 percent) of Millennial parents globally said they would have at least "a great deal of" trust, with India (80 percent) and China (76 percent) leading the way.
- Parents in the U.K. appear most skeptical, with less than four out of 10 -- 37 percent -- having at least "a great deal of" trust.
- While there was a slight increase in the amount of U.S. parents saying they have at least "a great deal of" trust (43 percent in 2018 vs. 39 percent in 2017), the amount of parents lacking trust increased as well (25 percent in 2018 vs. 15 percent in 2017).
Speak up and Smile: The Chatbot + Biometric Pediatrician is In
Experts say that in the future when people are ill they will be able to converse with a speech recognition-powered chatbot. The chatbot will use AI to compare the symptoms communicated against a database of diseases, patient history and circumstances, then recommend a course of action. How likely are Millennial parents across the globe to use an AI and speech recognition-powered chatbot to diagnose their sick Generation Alpha child, according to the survey?
- More than eight out of 10 parents in Asia (85 percent China; 83 percent India), say they are likely to use an AI chatbot to diagnose their sick child in the future, including more than a third (38 percent India; 34 percent China) saying they are extremely likely.
- However, approximately half of parents in the U.S. (52 percent) and U.K. (50 percent) say they would not be likely to use this technology to diagnose their child.
Facial recognition software and machine learning are also helping clinicians diagnose rare diseases by analyzing patient photos and correlating detected irregularities with rare genetic diseases. As for how comfortable Millennial parents would be using such technology to seek answers if they had concerns about their child's health:
- More than eight out of ten Millennial parents from Asia (81 percent in China; 84 percent in India), say they would be very comfortable using this technology for diagnosing their child.
- Close to two-thirds of Brazilian Millennial parents (64 percent) say they would be comfortable using facial recognition and machine software to diagnose their child, while 52 percent of Millennial parents from the U.S. indicated they would be comfortable.
- However, 51 percent of U.K. Millennial parents say they would not be comfortable using facial recognition and machine learning technology to diagnose their child.
Robot Surgeons Get a Thumbs up to Operate on Millennials' Children
Surgical robots powered by artificial intelligence are bringing new innovations and accuracy to the operating room.
- Millennial parents in Asia are significantly more likely to allow robots powered by AI to conduct surgery on their Generation Alpha child (China: 82 percent; India: 78 percent), while 45 percent of Millennial parents in both the U.S. and U.K. say they would be very likely.
- Sixty percent of Millennial parents in Brazil say they would be very likely to allow robots powered by AI conduct surgery.
- What's more, 22 percent of Millennial parents in the U.S. and 25 percent in the U.K. say they would be "not likely at all" to allow this surgery on their child.
In Life or Death Decisions for Generation Alpha Kids or Their Own Parents,
Millennials Trust Doctors Relying on AI
When asked whether they strongly or somewhat agree with the statement that they would trust doctors that base their recommendations on data coming from AI to make life or death decisions regarding their Generation Alpha children:
- More than half (51 percent) of Millennial parents in India say they strongly agree with this statement, while less than one out of 10 parents in India (5 percent) and China (7 percent) disagreed with this statement.
- Close to one-third of Millennial parents from China (35 percent), the U.S. (31 percent) and Brazil (31 percent) say they strongly agree.
Regarding Millennial parents' agreement with the statement that they would trust doctors that base recommendations on AI data to make life or death decisions for their own parents, the survey found:
- Forty-six percent of Millennial parents in India strongly agree with this statement, while close to one-third of parents from China (35 percent), one-quarter from Brazil (25 percent), 21 percent from the U.S., and 18 percent from the U.K. strongly agree.
AI, not kids, Preferred by Millennial Parents for Care During Golden Years
Millennial parents say they would prefer to use AI to live independently during their golden years, rather than relying on their Generation Alpha children. This is especially true in India and China, but much lower among U.S. parents.
- A clear majority of Chinese Millennial parents prefer to rely on AI (94 percent), with 79 percent of parents in India, and 61 percent of parents in both the U.K. and Brazil expressing the same sentiment.
- In 2018, 56 percent of U.S. parents said they would prefer to rely on AI, a seven percent decrease from 2017 when 63 percent of U.S. millennial parents said they would prefer AI and 37 percent prefer to rely on their children.
Real-Time AI Health Monitoring and Data Tracking Will Become Routine in the Future
Majorities of Millennial parents across the globe are confident AI will make real-time, round-the-clock monitoring and data tracking of their health -- including AI-powered reminders for medicine, exercise and doctor's visits -- a routine practice, especially in Asia.
- While Millennial parents in Asia are overwhelmingly confident (India: 88 percent; China: 87 percent), parents from Brazil (61 percent), the U.S. (60 percent), and the U.K. (55 percent) are also very confident this practice will become routine.
Millennials See Cancer Eradicated in Generation Alpha's Lifetime, Thanks to AI
Medical imaging coupled with AI can now diagnose many forms of cancer even before anything is suspected. According to the survey, Millennial parents in Asia are significantly more likely to think AI medical breakthroughs in the future will likely eradicate cancer during their Generation Alpha children's lifetime.
- A majority of Millennial parents in China (85 percent), India (83 percent) and Brazil (70 percent) think AI medical breakthroughs will eradicate cancer.
- Millennial parents in the U.S. and U.K. are split on this future outcome; in the U.S. 53 percent think cancer eradication is very likely and 47 percent see it as unlikely, while in the U.K. 51 percent think cancer eradication is very likely and 49 percent see it as unlikely.
"Generation AI 2018: Second Annual Study of Millennial Parents of Generation Alpha Kids" surveyed 2,000 parents, aged 20–36 years-old, with at least one child eight years old or younger -- 400 each in the United States, United Kingdom, India, China and Brazil. The surveys were conducted May 17-23, 2018.
About IEEE
IEEE is the world's largest technical professional organization dedicated to advancing technology for the benefit of humanity. Through its highly cited publications, conferences, technology standards, and professional and educational activities, IEEE is the trusted voice in a wide variety of areas ranging from aerospace systems, computers, and telecommunications to biomedical engineering, electric power, and consumer electronics. Learn more at http://www.ieee.org.
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