Shanghai Daily

Philips beefs up research and technology to better serve China

- Zhu Shenshen

Philips’ Chief Technology Officer Henk Van Houten visits Shanghai frequently because China has become a “second home” to Philips, especially when it moved its regional research headquarte­rs to Shanghai. Now the Philips China Innovation Hub has become one of the top four research institutio­ns for Philips globally.

The Holland-based firm is seeking business opportunit­ies and innovation in China, to meet challenges like polluted air, limited medical resources and an aging society.

As CTO, Houten has the right to say how to spend the company’s research fund, which hits 1.7 billion euros (US$1.97 billion) annually, 60 percent of which is spent on software.

The latest tools in Houten’s arsenal are AI (artificial intelligen­ce) and cloud, both of which are tools to help the company fly when it is transformi­ng into a “solution company” besides just selling products.

With the opening of the new AI lab in Shanghai this April, Philips aims to offer solutions to consumers, patients and hospitals. It helps clients to reduce the cost, complexity and burden with innovative solutions using AI and cloud.

In China, Philips has already establishe­d and strengthen­ed with deeper collaborat­ion with its local partners, including Digital China Health, Huawei and Alibaba. The latest stage for Philips to show “muscle” is the China Internatio­nal Import Expo, a top-level internatio­nal business cooperatio­n and innovation platform to be held in Shanghai in November.

During his recent visit to Shanghai, Houten talked with Shanghai Daily on topics covering Philips innovation strategy, AI presence and deployment in China, as well as local talent strategy. He mentioned the company’s mission to lead “meaningful innovation” to improve people’s lives. And he also shed lights on digital revolution and its implicatio­n in the health care industry.

Wang Xi, Philips China CTO, was also present during the talk. started an air business in China because of the pressing needs of air purificati­on. But now we grow air purificati­on businesses in other countries, that’s also “local for global.”

Houten: Our mission is always to improve the lives of people, and this is what we call “meaningful innovation.” We work to connect lower-tier hospitals to premier hospitals to make sure that people here can get meaningful diagnoses frequently.

Overall, we have a workforce of over 1,000 for innovation in Shanghai, Suzhou, Shenzhen, Shenyang, Jiaxing, Zhuhai and Chengdu. We hope to increase the number by 20 percent annually. Though with competitio­n with dot-com firms happening in China and rest of world, we can still attract top talent to work with us. They often like to come to work for us because they feel they can help people to live better.

On technology partnershi­p in China, Philips has establishe­d strategic collaborat­ions with Huawei, Baidu, Alibaba and Tencent in different fields. We have made our partnershi­p go deep by establishi­ng strategic ties with academia, enterprise­s, and local startups.

Wang: If you look at the Philips company strategy “Health Continuum,” we are really looking at the entire journey of a patient from healthy living, prevention, diagnosis, treatment and then home care. Of course, this strategy aligns very well with the Chinese government’s top health reform agenda.

We pioneer these innovation activities here and they can be certainly leveraged not just for the Chinese population­s’ well-being, but can be beneficial to other parts of the world as well. are coming in a big way in China. So that’s putting a lot of stress on the health care system, due to lack of skilled staff, overburden­ed hospitals, as well as increasing cost of health care.

Meanwhile, we also see a big technology enabler, as digital revolution. Like traditiona­l photograph­y evolvement into digital one, it is also happening in health care right now. So, like the smart cameras in the latest cool mobile phones, our MR and CT scanners are also run by software and AI, which make them smarter with better efficiency and higher quality. And they are not siloed in their own department­s, we are building integrated solution to link whole clinic practices together to deliver bigger value. That is one of our key strategies, transformi­ng to a solution company.

Houten: At Philips, we believe AI is not just a pure isolated technology but it need as to work hand in hand with people.

That’s what we mean about “Adaptive Intelligen­ce” that helps people do their work, and also helps patients and consumers at home. AI is computer science linking to human science, for example we need to understand how to change people’s behavior — if patients don’t take their pills, how can we motivate them to take medical prescripti­ons, or if children are overweight, how do we convince them to have healthy nutrition? So we think AI can really help there, in this case it’s about combining computer science with behavioral science.

AI is embedded in almost every product, software and service of Philips. AI makes our products smart and responsive to people, that can be applied for household appliances like smart shavers, smart toothbrush­es or imaging equipment and monitoring equipment. It will go all the way from AI for setting the best premier MR scanner to decide what kind of scan it will take, and also to use AI to visualize and interpret the images.

That’s also why we establish AI research department­s in our key countries, not just in Shanghai, but also in Eindhoven in the Netherland­s, Cambridge in North America and Bangalore in India.

We are very interested in exploring new business models, delivering more for applicatio­ns in China. And we think that cloud will have a significan­t impact in making health care applicatio­ns available to China, so we are working with local partner to create cloud-based solutions.

Wang: Philips will showcase products and services with three spotlights covering connection, digital and AI-enabled solution across health continuum during the CIIE expo.

At Philips’ pavilion, four highlights will be presented to the CIIE audience: a world-leading digital imaging system and intelligen­t informatic­s system to usher in a precision-health care era; connected care and AI-driven solutions; smart consumer health solutions; our AI strategy and transformi­ng data into insights to benefit health care profession­als.

 ??  ?? Philips’ Chief Technology Officer Henk Van Houten
Philips’ Chief Technology Officer Henk Van Houten

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