Personal Digital Twin Platform TwinGenesis Creates AI-Powered Virtual Replicas for Health Prediction
Sony and Samsung jointly launch TwinGenesis, creating personalized digital twins that can simulate health outcomes and predict disease risk.
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Sony and Samsung jointly launched TwinGenesis on November 22, 2028 — a cloud platform that creates AI digital twins for individuals.
TwinGenesis integrates data from users' wearable devices, medical records, and environmental sensors to build a digital replica capable of simulating health conditions and behavioral patterns. The digital twin can run what-if scenarios — for example, simulating how a dietary change would affect blood glucose, or how an exercise regimen would impact long-term cardiovascular health.
Among the first 1,000 test users, TwinGenesis achieved an 82% accuracy rate in health predictions and an 89% accuracy rate in early warning for type 2 diabetes risk six months in advance. The platform has opened registration in Japan and South Korea, priced at 2,980 yen per month.
However, the platform has sparked debate over data ownership and control. A digital twin is essentially a highly detailed digital copy of a person — who owns this copy? If the user passes away, can the digital twin continue to operate? Japan's Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications has indicated it will develop specific guidelines for digital twin data governance.
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