WSU smart-home research expanding

Fritz stands at a podium as a house blueprint is projected behind her.
Roschelle “Shelly” Fritz gave a presentation on her smart-home research at Greater Spokane Incorporated on June 19.

By Addy Hatch, WSU Nursing

SPOKANE, Wash. – A pilot project led by WSU scientists that’s using smart-home technology for health care is expanding to other locations and uses.

Faculty researchers in nursing, computer science and psychology have been testing the technology and processes at a retirement community in Spokane, in a project involving subjects who have a chronic illness.

That research has expanded to include sites in Beaverton, Ore., and in Southwest Washington involving people with dementia. Additional projects are in the works for Parkinson’s research in Vancouver, Wash., and among people with multiple chronic illnesses in Australia.

Roschelle “Shelly” Fritz, assistant professor in the College of Nursing in Vancouver, is working on the projects with Diane Cook, the Huie-Rogers chair professor in the School of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science; and Maureen Schmitter-Edgecomb, the Herbert L. Eastlick professor in the Department of Psychology.

The three WSU scientists were awarded a $1.77 million grant from the National Institutes of Nursing Research last summer. They and two other researchers garnered an additional $912,000 NIH grant to develop online tools related to the research.

The research brings together the analytics produced by smart-home sensors and the judgment and experience of health-care professionals to create an automated health assessment. For example, the sensors might record movement as someone gets up to get a glass of water each night, a pattern that the clinician flags as relevant. Then the engineers train the computer to recognize similar patterns that could be encountered in the future.

“The big thing we’ve learned is that engineers can train the artificial intelligence agent to recognize a change in health state with greater than 90 percent accuracy,” Fritz said recently. “We have three examples of that” from the work done at Touchmark on South Hill, a retirement community in Spokane.

Second, the data is valuable for making health care decisions, she said. The three researchers had computer science and psychology students organize the data collected by in-home sensors and telehealth visits, then asked nursing students to evaluate it.

“We asked them, ‘Could you use this to make a clinical decision?’” Fritz said of the changes in movement or behavioral patterns. “‘Would you prescribe something or change the treatment regimen, based on this new type of information?’ The answer was resoundingly yes.”

Fritz said she’s also working on a related study with Connie Nguyen-Truong, an assistant professor in the College of Nursing in Vancouver, on cultural perspectives toward smart-home technology among older Asian immigrants. Fritz said the goal is to deploy five smart-homes in that community, and they’re working with a strong and respected community partner, Asian Health and Service Center.

“To date our sample has been primarily white people, and that’s a problem,” she said. “We already know that implicit bias exists in artificial intelligence, because a lot of middle- and upper-class white people are doing the programming. So we’re going to purposefully look to infuse nonwhite voices into AI by diversifying our sample and by providing annotated data sets and narratives of minority experiences with the smart home to the programmers, and that’s going to be huge.”

Fritz was invited to discuss her research this summer at the National Institute of Nursing Research, and will teach others how to see changes in people’s health based on sensor data. She’s developing a framework she calls the Fritz Method that clinicians can follow. “I’m only one person, but using the Fritz Method, any clinical person can provide ground truth for data sets used to train the AI agent,” she said.

 

Contact:

  • Addy Hatch, communication director, WSU College of Nursing, 509-324-7340, addy.hatch@wsu.edu

Next Story

Recent News

Selling the city: students elevate Vancouver’s tourism strategy

WSU students partnered with Visit Vancouver to develop real-world tourism strategies, identifying new event opportunities and marketing ideas that highlight the city’s growing potential as a regional destination.

Greek Week success provides big support for Pullman downtown businesses

Over 1,500 students from WSU Pullman’s Greek community recently converged on downtown Pullman to help with many projects including spring cleaning, food distribution at the Community Action Center, organizing trivia for Bishop Place residents, and raising money to support local businesses.

Jon Haarlow to lead Washington State Athletics

Haarlow, who has served as interim athletic director since Nov. 12, 2025, will be introduced at a press conference in the Alger Family Club Room at Gesa Field, Monday, April 20, at 11 a.m.

Rare Angora goat rejoins her herd after surgery at WSU

A rare Angora goat from northern Idaho has returned to her herd after WSU veterinarians performed a minimally invasive surgery to remove cystic ovaries that had been threatening her health and behavior.