Robots safeguard students' health
(chinadaily.com.cn) Updated:2020-07-13
A preschool screening robot checks a pupil's health condition at Zhuyuan Kindergarten of the Suzhou Foreign Language School in Suzhou, Jiangsu province in early June. [Photo provided to chinadaily.com.cn]
Adoption of smart robots in school routines can safeguard students' health. It will facilitate better understanding of pupils' health information among parents, teaching and administrative staff, and be able to both monitor and track potential uncertainties well in time, said Dong Bin, general principal of Suzhou Foreign Language School, which runs 12 schools and kindergartens throughout East China's Jiangsu province.
The department of education and knowledge of the local government of Abu Dhabi, an emirate of the United Arab Emirates, has also contacted Walklake to explore the possibility of introducing the health-screening robot in its school management system.
Walklake head Zhang said the robots will not only play a big role this year but become many educational institutions' preferred long-term option to better monitor students' health in the post-pandemic era. The company will continue to rely on various online social networks and e-commerce platforms to expand its brand influence globally, especially in markets related to the Belt and Road Initiative.
Like Walklake, other domestic manufacturers have been gearing up to fulfill their overseas orders via the internet. Many of them have already designed new web pages with 3D features to display their latest products and services to overseas buyers and to minimize the adverse impact of international air travel restrictions.
Zhang noted demand for robots has exploded amid the coronavirus outbreak as potential new clients emerged beyond the educational sector. Apart from deploying disinfection robots and automated goods distributors, many businesses have adopted smart screening robots in their plants or offices to assist in their work operations and production resumption.
"Automatic data retention, statistics and analyses generated by our robots can provide support to the government's management of disease control," he said.
"The service robots are designed to help people improve their daily lives with a new lifestyle. During the prevention and control of the epidemic, many consumers have raised their health consciousness. This will boost demand for smart household appliances," said Li Qun, a researcher at the Chinese Academy of Science and Technology for Development in Beijing.
He said a large number of manufacturers are outgrowing the phase of being mere OEMs or original equipment manufacturers, or contract suppliers, for foreign companies. Many of them are trying to evolve into global-scale manufacturers in their own right by investing more in innovation, cross-brand collaboration, mergers and acquisitions.
Thanks to their technology accumulation and the country's well-developed 5G and 4G service networks, many Chinese companies have launched multiple products and technology solutions to help prevent and control the epidemic since February, said Zhang Yongjun, a researcher at the Beijing-based China Center for International Economic Exchanges.
Zhang predicted that more AI-enabled temperature testing systems, smart robots, warning platforms designed to limit human movement, voice-controlled elevators, and intelligent voice electronic medical record systems will be widely used in the domestic market soon.
"China's 'new infrastructure' development, with digitalization and innovation at its core, represents this promising future," he said. "For the short term, investments in this area will provide fresh impetus to post-epidemic economic growth, and a new round of market opportunities will therefore emerge for related businesses."