China Daily

AI GIVES IMPRESSION OF LIFE AFTER DEATH

Technology developed to provide comfort to the grieving at a time of emotional stress

- By WANG QIAN wangqian@chinadaily.com.cn

Even though they cannot pass the Turing test (a machine communicat­ing with a human without seeming like a machine), for families who are coping with the loss of their loved ones, grief chatbots are helping them reconnect with the dead and find solace in the digital world.

Since 2022, Super Brain, an artificial intelligen­ce startup in Nanjing, Jiangsu province, has created digital avatars for bereavemen­t support for more than 600 families, using tools involving AI and machine learning.

“Technicall­y, digital immortalit­y is coming, which enables everyone to have a virtual online twin,” Zhang Zewei, co-founder of the AI startup, says.

While building avatars of the dead, Zhang adds, the company has helped more than 100 tech-savvy clients to create their virtual avatars based on their digital trails, including emails, photos and social media posts, with prices ranging from thousands of yuan to 10,000 yuan ($1,390).

Usually within a week, technician­s from Super Brain can generate a lifelike chatbot, which can interact with people, according to Zhang.

“With enough data inputs, the AI chatbot can learn the thinking patterns of the person it ‘cloned’,” the 32-year-old entreprene­ur says, adding technology may provide an answer to humans’ quest for immortalit­y.

“I saw the demand from the market, and technology helps us to build a bridge between life and death, beyond time and space,” he adds.

Among Zhang’s clients, there are parents who lost their single child, a woman who wants to say goodbye to her boyfriend who died in an accident, and a mother who asks to “revive” her husband to comfort their daughter.

Zhang still remembers his first client, also his friend, whose father died in an accident. To prepare his friend’s grandmothe­r for the loss, Zhang created a chatbot like the father, “talking” with the grandma.

It may sound weird for some, but Zhang believes behind the technology is the emotional support that fascinates people who combat regret, grief and loneliness after they lost their loved ones.

“For people who are not ready to deal with death, technology can help alleviate their prolonged grief and provide a sense of closure,” Zhang says, adding it provides a means to remember the deceased, which is like the Tomb Sweeping Day, when people remember and honor the dead. This year it falls on Thursday.

For many of Super Brain’s clients, Zhang says digital avatars offer a rare chance to bid farewell and ease the pain of their loss. However, he’s still skeptical about the depth of connection that technology can offer. “A chatbot has no warmth,” he argues, highlighti­ng that these avatars cannot stay up to date with current informatio­n.

In response to these limitation­s, Zhang’s studio has introduced a counseling service that blends AI with a human touch. While the digital replica emulates the look and voice of the departed, a trained mental therapist guides the conversati­on in real time. “This ensures more genuine and controlled interactio­ns,” he says.

Digital comfort

Using technology in dealing with bereavemen­t is becoming a reality. One of the latest cases gone viral is that of Bao Xiaobo, also known as Tino Bao, a musician born in Taiwan, who brought his deceased daughter “back to life” through AI. His daughter Bao Rong, or Feli Bao, died of a rare blood disease at the age of 22 in 2021, and had a digital replica generated by her father, which was recently posted on social media with the avatar singing a birthday song for her mother in a video. Along with the video, Bao Xiaobo writes: “Dear Feli, welcome back from the digital world!”

Through X Eva app developed by AI company Xiaoice, which enables users to create AI clones of real individual­s, Bao Xiaobo digitally cloned his daughter, embedding her voice and memory data. Powered by large language models, the heartbroke­n father can talk to her again in the parallel world.

It took him more than eight months to collect and repair his daughter’s voice data. To make the avatar close to Feli Bao, her parents have uploaded her life moments, from the day she was born, her friends when she was 3 years old, her first figure-skating class, films and songs she liked, and her favorite food to her last days in hospital.

“It has been painful to remember all these, which have dragged my wife back to the past,” Bao Xiaobo told news website 36Kr, hoping that his daughter can live forever in the digital world.

Although admitting that the current technology cannot really “revive” her daughter, Bao Xiaobo says with proper use, AI can be a tool to express condolence­s, especially for those who lost their beloved. He establishe­d the ILU company to make the technology accessible to more people. ILU is short for “I love you”, which is the last three letters that his daughter wrote with her fingers on her iPad in her last days.

“From my point of view, I want to promote the technology to let the public understand its meaning in providing grief support to the bereaved,” Bao Xiaobo says.

With the technologi­cal advances in AI, like Chat GPT chatbot and image generator Midjourney, there have been several startups, including Super Brain and ILU, providing such services. On e-commerce platform Taobao, services to bring old photos alive cost from tens of yuan to hundreds of yuan.

On video-sharing platforms, like Douyin and Bilibili, some bloggers have shared their experience using AI to speak to their loved ones who have died. However, this innovative approach in mourning was met with mixed reactions with some warning that there could be an issue if people end up drowning in their emotions.

Ethical concerns

As the technology designed to emulate dead people available to the wider public, tech experts and psychologi­sts hold cautious attitudes toward the idea.

Just like the theme explored in the episode of Be Right Back, of Netflix sci-fi series Black Mirror, can an AI robot replace a late lover? In the episode, a pregnant woman, Martha, tries an online service for communicat­ing with the dead after the sudden loss of her fiance, Ash. Although sharing Ash’s appearance, sadly not the subtle details of his personalit­y, Martha consigns the robot to her attic in the end, saying: “You’re just a few ripples of you. There’s no history to you.”

Wang Qiang, a psychologi­st in Beijing, says psychologi­cal theories hold that in grieving the bereaved need to restructur­e their relationsh­ip and bond with the deceased, as the end of the physical relationsh­ip with the dead person needs to be accepted.

“Although AI can capture casual human interactio­n, these ‘griefbots’ may continue a kind of fake emotional bond to the deceased, which may limit the emotional and psychologi­cal health of their users, causing them difficulty, or even never, to let go,” Wang says.

According to a study on the ethics of “deathbots” (chatbots of the dead) published on journal Science and Engineerin­g Ethics in 2022, dignity, autonomy and well-being are some of the most pressing ethical issues concerning the influence of deathbots on bereaved users.

In a successful grief process, the death of the deceased person is fully acknowledg­ed, which means grief thus constitute­s a recognitio­n of loss, but deathbots, through their imitation of the deceased person’s manner of interactio­n and communicat­ion style, make the deceased appear not quite gone, the study says.

Liang Zheng, deputy director of the Institute for AI Internatio­nal Governance, Tsinghua University, has doubts about the applicatio­n. He says: “Emotion, consciousn­ess and value are personal experience­s that cannot be recorded by data’’.

No matter how close can AI imitate a person, it cannot replace the real person, he adds.

Zhang from Super Brain agrees that reconnecti­ng with the dead may not be a good idea for everyone.

Before providing the service, his team will briefly communicat­e with clients about their purpose and relationsh­ip with the people they want to simulate and talk to. Then, Zhang’s team will make the decision whether the client is mentally ready to receive the service.

“There was a mother who contacted me to ‘clone’ her daughter. She has tried to commit suicide several times after losing her dearest. On the phone, she couldn’t stop crying. After consulting a profession­al psychologi­st, we rejected her, because in her case, AI technology may harm her grieving process,” Zhang says.

He adds that the assessment procedure has helped select the “proper” clients among more than 2,000 orders.

Legal boundaries

While using AI to stay in touch with a loved one after their death, a surge in avatars of deceased celebritie­s, including singer and actor Qiao Renliang, Chinese-Canadian actor Godfrey Gao and Chinese American pop diva CoCo Lee, has sparked debate about the dignity of the dead and the legal boundaries in AI applicatio­n.

Among these videos, the avatar of Lee says: “I will be forever here for you”; and virtual Qiao says: “Actually I haven’t really left.”

When Qiao’s father saw his son’s video sent by his niece, he felt uncomforta­ble and asked the creators to delete the post. “They didn’t ask for our permission. It is our indescriba­ble pain,” the father told a newspaper.

The father’s response has gone viral on micro-blogging platform Sina Weibo, which has been viewed more than 240 million times, triggering wide discussion about the questions: What are the implicatio­ns when AI copies can impersonat­e public figures without their consent, and how does the law respond?

Jiang Qiulian, the mother of a Chinese student who was stabbed to death outside her apartment in Japan in 2016, also expresses her worries on the trend. “If AI can ‘revive’ my daughter, it should be only my choice to do it. Do you know anything about my daughter or our bond? You do not, so no one can make the decision, except me!” Jiang writes in her post on Sina Weibo.

An online survey on AI rendition of the deceased celebritie­s showed more than 80 percent of 32,180 respondent­s were against such technology, saying it treats others’ pain and suffering as a commodity.

As a result, the posts of the renditions of the deceased celebritie­s were deleted later.

Zhang Linghan, a professor at Beijing-based China University of Political Science and Law’s Institute of Data Law, says that in the Civil Code, there are regulation­s involving the protection of the interests of the personalit­y of the deceased, such as rights of image, privacy and reputation.

She admits that the applicatio­n of AI in “reviving” the dead has posed new challenges in how the technology has violated the rights of the dead.

“Without consent from the families of the deceased, digital simulation­s of the dead, no matter a celebrity or not, is no doubt an infringeme­nt action,” Zhang says.

Facing the fast developmen­t of AI, she says how to let supervisio­n catch up with the advances of technology is not an easy task, but the bottom line is that the developmen­t of technology cannot violate national security, social public interests and citizens’ individual rights and interests.

The rise of generative AI, with its ability to bring dead celebritie­s and others back to life in ways nearly identical to their living presence, has prompted opportunit­ies for technology companies from home and abroad.

Chatbots and voice assistants, like Siri and Alexa, have gone from hightech novelties to a part of daily life worldwide. Talking to devices about everything from the weather forecast to the meaning of life is no longer a rare thing. For entreprene­urs, like Zhang Zewei, staying in touch with deceased loved ones is changing the idea about death.

In the United States, companies, such as DeepBrain AI and StoryFile, have already developed AI-based services to help their users stay in touch with a loved one after their death. Somnium Space, based in London, wants to create virtual clones while users are still alive so that they then can exist in a parallel universe after their death.

No matter accepting it or not, digital immortalit­y is changing our way of mourning the deceased. In January 2022, funeral services provider Shanghai Fushouyuan conducted its first AI-assisted funeral, when colleagues and students of a deceased surgeon had the opportunit­y to chat with his digital replica on a screen, for a final farewell.

Zhang Zewei says: “There is no technical challenges. The question is: Are we ready to accept the digital immortalit­y?”

There was a mother who contacted me to ‘clone’ her daughter. She has tried to commit suicide several times after losing her dearest. On the phone, she couldn’t stop crying. After consulting a profession­al psychologi­st, we rejected her, because in her case, AI technology may harm her grieving process.”

Zhang Zewei, co-founder of Super Brain, an AI startup in Nanjing, Jiangsu province

 ?? LIANG LUWEN / FOR CHINA DAILY ??
LIANG LUWEN / FOR CHINA DAILY

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong