Chinese AI cameras assess suspects' health, mental state, risk
Quick Look
- Chinese AI-enabled cameras can assess suspects' physical health, mental state, and risk levels.
- Tiandy's camera tracks vital signs like heart rate and blood pressure with over 90% accuracy, potentially flagging medical crises or irregular policing.
AI-generated summary
Why It Matters
Chinese AI-enabled equipment is being showcased at a law enforcement exhibition in Beijing, with a focus on technologies that can assess suspects' physical and mental states. Tiandy, a video surveillance supplier, presented a camera designed for this purpose.
Chinese AI-enabled equipment can help police assess the physical health, mental state, and even risk level of suspects, according to demonstrations at a law enforcement equipment exhibition in Beijing last week.
Among the displays was a camera developed by video surveillance supplier Tiandy, based in the northern Chinese city of Tianjin, which is designed to assess the vital signs – including heart rate, blood pressure, blood oxygen level and blood flow rate – of up to six people at a time, according to a presentation by the company.
It generated results from subjects standing in front of the camera for about 10 seconds, results that Tiandy said were more than 90 per cent accurate. In the demonstration, the participants’ vital signs were shown on a screen alongside their live images, with increased blood pressure, heart rate or other abnormal indicators highlighted in yellow or red.
The company said the product was best employed in an interrogation waiting area where four cameras could capture the vital signs of two dozen people.
Tiandy said the technology could track detainees’ live location and warn of a sudden medical crisis. It could also flag irregular policing behaviour that breached protocols, such as leaving a detainee unattended or interrogating a subject with only one officer present.
Open Questions
- What are the specific ethical implications of using AI to assess suspects' mental states?
- What are the potential biases in the AI algorithms used by Tiandy?
- How will this technology be regulated and deployed by law enforcement agencies?
- What are the privacy concerns associated with continuous monitoring of vital signs?



