时间:2025-11-22 11:40:34 来源:网络整理编辑:綜合
How does a toilet sound to you that, based on what you poop and pee, automatically gives you tips on
How does a toilet sound to you that, based on what you poop and pee, automatically gives you tips on how to eat healthier or detects early warning of an illness?
Amazing? Creepy? Maybe a little bit of column A, a little bit of column B?
Well, it's coming, folks. It's just not clear when.
One fancy toilet manufacturer just threw its hat into the ring to produce the smart toilet of the future: Toto. At CES Monday, the Japan-based toilet, bidet, and cleanliness products maker unveiled a new concept for its "Wellness Toilet."
Using "multiple cutting-edge sensing technologies," each time a person sat on the toilet, it would track and analyze a person's "mental and physical status," according to a press release. Then it would send that data to an app to provide users with recommendations. The example Toto gives is that when it detects an "unbalanced diet," it suggests other foods to eat. Like salmon.
Your toilet wants to tell you what to do.Credit: totoIf this sounds light on details to you, you're correct.
"This is a concept announcement," Ryoji Nakamura, Toto's head of digital innovation, said. "We cannot disclose everything. But what I can explain is that in this wellness toilet concept, we are going to utilize multiple sensing technologies to detect health-related information. For example, stress and fitness level, and body conditions. We are going to collect multiple health data from sensing technologies."
In conversation with Mashable, Nakamura also shared that the idea has been in development since 2017. So there is real research and development that's gone into the idea; there just isn't a strict timeline for release. Nakamura also said that some of the inputs it would collect would be scent and blood flow, but did not provide more details about how it would actually take those measurements. There also isn't a set timeline for when this toilet concept is set to come to fruition.
That level of detail did not surprise others in the smart toilet space.
"The real challenge this whole area faces is how do we bring the technology that exists in academic research laboratories into the toilet environment in a way that's going to be able to provide the same type of — or good enough — data at a price that that people could afford," Joshua Coon, a University of Wisconsin professor who has studied the collection of metabolic insights from human waste, said. "That's where the real challenge is, and it's not clear to me that Toto has figured out how to solve that either."
Toto is not alone in its efforts. Multiple academic groups and companies are working on analyzing the ~raw data~ we create in the toilet.
One group at Stanford University made headlines last year when they debuted a technology that gleaned health insights from a person's poop, with a camera that recognized an individual's butthole. Last year, Coon published research that showed what he was able to learn about his health from monitoring his own (and his colleague's) urine.
The probiotic and gastrointestinal health company Seed, along with researchers at AI company Auggi, are creating a crowdsourced poop database to advance understanding of feces analysis. And the startup Toi Labs is working on additional tech to analyze poop and provide data, which has involved the company creating its own poop database. Over the years, other companies have produced wildly expensive "smart toilets" that were neither that viable nor that smart (they mostly provided info on environmental stats, like how much water you're using).
In addition to figuring out the cost of putting a mini lab in a toilet, companies who want to provide viable products also have to undergo years of testing. That takes time and money.
"There's a lot of evidence that needs to be presented for a new modality of analysis of the toilet to really be credible," Vik Kashyap, the founder of Toi Labs, said. "To build the toilet of the future is not as easy as it might seem."
That doesn't mean it's not possible. Coon said that giving advice on diet or exercise based on monitoring human waste "is not science fiction." The challenge is just fitting all the tools to do that into a toilet.
TopicsCESHealthInnovations
Mall builds real2025-11-22 11:37
深度:斯特林重返利物浦? 右腦猛烈拒絕左腦瘋狂點讚2025-11-22 11:24
索帥在曼聯最後時光:高層無奈同意解雇他 球員淚流滿麵2025-11-22 11:14
曝曼聯將波切蒂諾視為新帥頭號人選 盼他明夏上任2025-11-22 10:57
Photos show the Blue Cut fire blazing a path of destruction in California2025-11-22 10:53
萌生退意?徐根寶:海港U15隊是我最後一批成建製隊員2025-11-22 10:53
實至名歸 !佩德裏榮膺2021年金童獎 領先優勢創紀錄2025-11-22 10:42
媒體人 :把中超和出線足球分開 嚴查資金來源和股東成分2025-11-22 09:49
Dog elected for third term as mayor of Minnesota town2025-11-22 09:47
重慶隊股權改革無實質性進展 大部分球員已經回家等待結果2025-11-22 09:41
Did our grandparents have the best beauty advice?2025-11-22 11:28
媒體人 :把中超和出線足球分開 嚴查資金來源和股東成分2025-11-22 11:14
國安官方 :最後9名參加亞冠球員 、工作人員抵京 開始隔離2025-11-22 11:09
巴薩昔日神仙組合齊觀賽F1 小羅埃托奧深情擁抱2025-11-22 10:48
More than half of women in advertising have faced sexual harassment, report says2025-11-22 09:58
深度:斯特林重返利物浦 ? 右腦猛烈拒絕左腦瘋狂點讚2025-11-22 09:55
山東泰山發海報祝費萊尼34歲生日快樂 本賽季已攻入9粒進球2025-11-22 09:53
馬奎爾告別索帥 :你把我帶到最佳俱樂部 永存感激2025-11-22 09:45
Sound the alarms: Simone Biles finally met Zac Efron2025-11-22 09:20
莫雷諾與申花是否續約雙方仍在商談 曾約定足協杯後放假2025-11-22 09:19