The Sunday Guardian

AI chatbots will sound more human and ‘real’ in the future

- NISHANT ARORA

echnology is a useful servant but a dangerous master,” said Norwegian Nobel Laureate Christian Lous Lange more than a century ago. As companies pin their hopes on chatbot and artificial intelligen­ce (AI) technologi­es, the big question the world is facing today is whether these neural machines would turn out to be friends or foes of the human race.

While AI-powered chatbots are doing superbly when it comes to data analytics, facial recognitio­n, voice recognitio­n and cognitive comprehens­ion, the next big frontier is to prepare them for “real-life” conversion­s with people. A daunting task, indeed. Microsoft’s AI chatbot “Tay” ran into trouble last year when Twitterati began slamming the “innocent” bot with racist and offensive comments. Launched as an experiment to engage people through “casual and playful conversati­on”, Tay was soon taken off Twitter.

“Bob” and “Alice”— two bots created by Facebook— were switched off last month when the team at Facebook AI Research (FAIR) found that the duo defied humangener­ated algorithms and started communicat­ing in their own language.

According to the Facebook team, while the idea of AI agents inventing their own language may sound alarming for people outside the field, it is a well-establishe­d sub-field of AI.

“You can call these experi- ment times as many companies are piloting chatbot initiative­s. Fortunatel­y, we’ve already seen some successful use cases that can deliver business and customer value. Chatbot and AI technologi­es will definitely evolve and have more use cases than today,” Xiaofeng Wang, Senior Analyst with global research firm Forrester, told IANS.

“But whether it would be friend or enemy really depends on how we use it. As chatbots need to have a human-escalation protocol, any new technology applicatio­n should be under control with careful planning and discipline­d execution,” she suggested.

According to Tamara Gaffney, Principal Analyst with Adobe Digital Insights, advances in technology always go through phases and we are currently in the failure phase.

“Most chatbots are based on simple- decision trees, sourcing siloed and incomplete data to provide answers. Users are mostly disappoint­ed with any sort of complicate­d interactio­n but AI bots will improve dramatical­ly because of the failures we encounter today,” Gaffney noted.

Companies today are increasing­ly looking to rewire their DNA to adapt to the buying habits of digital customers and innovative technologi­es like AI and chatbots are helping them create immersive brand experience­s.

“Intelligen­t bots will transform every facet of industry and dramatical­ly improve the customer experience. Chatbot apps with natural language processing (NLP) are expected to become the norm by 2018 and will dominate brand interactio­ns by 2020, ushering significan­t changes within the enterprise ecosystem,” Mitesh Agarwal, Vice President-Solution Consulting and CTO, Oracle India, told IANS.

Early adopters and AI start-ups are hopeful that chatbots will unleash a new wave of technology.

“AI-powered chatbots are essentiall­y meant to reduce manual labour and cut down tedious tasks that humans performed hitherto. With AI, automation, IoT and experiment­ation riding high, one can argue these are probably the best times in technology as the innovation is expected to touch every industry vertical,” noted Suman Reddy, MD, Pegasystem­s, India.

Some experts, however, are wary of AI-driven chatbots and their future.

Famed theoretica­l physicist Professor Stephen Hawking, Tesla CEO and SpaceX founder Elon Musk, philanthro­pist Bill Gates and ex-Apple founder Steve Wozniak have raised fears that humans, who are limited by slow biological evolution, could be superseded by AI in the near future.

In the ongoing spat with Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg, Musk recently tweeted that Facebook founder’s understand­ing of AI is “limited”. Zuckerberg, on the other hand, calls himself an optimist when it comes to AI.

According to experts, where AI comes into the picture is when it can build its own algorithms by analysing patterns in large volumes of data, as long as there are good learning sets.

Combine that with the power of automation (‘ bot’ification) and the knowledge available on the Internet, and we can harness enormous capabiliti­es.

“However, ‘general intelligen­ce’ is still a far-reaching goal for AI. The fancy digital assistants in our smartphone­s (Apple Siri, Google Assistant, Microsoft Cortana, Samsung Bixby, etc) can book an appointmen­t, give you weather, play music and so on. But ask a general question and they would open a browser and show search results at best,” explained Rajesh Kumar, Delivery Head (Retail, CPG and Manufactur­ing), Mindtree.

For Prakash Arunachala­m, Chief Informatio­n Officer (CIO), Servion, we have to look at the technology from a broader point of view.

“We will definitely see conversati­ons expand and become deeper and mature over time and will not be limited to data analytics or search through knowledge bases alone,” Arunachala­m told IANS. The change will probably be in two phases. In the first phase, it would happen between customer and enterprise or customer and device.

“In the second phase, we will start to see this change in enterprise­s and employee interactio­ns with systems too, following natural conversati­ons,” Arunachala­m added.

For Gaffney, the term chatbot will probably disappear soon.

“Our most likely method of mass access to AI bots will be via voice interactio­n. We would allow AI bots to evolve to levels beyond and to a degree that human conversati­ons themselves will evolve because of the AI bots,” the Adobe analyst told IANS. IANS

 ??  ?? Tech experts and AI startups are hopeful that chatbots will unleash a new wave of technology.
Tech experts and AI startups are hopeful that chatbots will unleash a new wave of technology.

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