Anyone who visits Wong Tai Sin, a healthcare center in the northern part of Hong Kong, will be welcomed by a curious sight. At first glance, the three illuminated panels hanging on the wall appear to be artworks depicting local landmarks like the Kai Tak River, or Morse Park. But if you give one of the panels a thumbs-up, the panels switch from blue to green.

If you raise your arms above your head, the lights flick to yellow. The panels—made from illuminated textiles comprised of polymeric optical fibers stretched taught around a frame—are more than eye candy: They are interactive tools designed to stimulate the senses and encourage dexterity and mobility in elderly patients. Each panel has a tiny integrated camera that is linked to an AI-powered computer vision model trained to recognize particular hand or body gestures, then light up in response.

These “intelligent textiles” were designed by Jeanne Tan, an associate professor at the Hong Kong Polytechnic University, in collaboration with occupational therapists. Since they were first installed in 2021, they have been so popular that they inspired the team to design a knitted pillow that can change colors when you press or stroke various parts of it, an interactive screen divider for people with advanced dementia, and a smaller, more portable interactive box with a textile screen inside it. The team can program each of these textiles to respond to various gestures, even when the gestures aren’t 100% perfect.

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