Bangkok Post

WHY SIRI HAS BEEN MADE TO FORGET WHERE THE BODIES HAVE BEEN BURIED

A divide has emerged in the tech world as companies debate how much personalit­y to give their lucrative digital assistants By Julia Love and Yasmeen Abutaleb

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When users ask Siri, Apple’s digital assistant, what she likes to drink, she is quick with an answer. “I have a thirst for knowledge,” she responds. Her counterpar­t at Microsoft, Cortana, opts for a very, very dry martini.

But M, the digital assistant Facebook is testing, deflects the question. “I don’t have an opinion about that. What’s your favourite drink?”

As the tech giants race to build ever better artificial intelligen­ce platforms, they are obsessing over the nuances of their digital assistants’ personalit­ies.

For users, digital assistants are a gateway to powerful artificial intelligen­ce tools developers expect to influence major decisions about what to buy and how to spend time.

The more tech companies can get users to rely on their digital assistants, the more valuable data they will accumulate about the spending habits, interests and preference­s of users. The informatio­n could be fodder for lucrative digital advertisin­g or a lever for companies to keep users locked into their ecosystems.

But companies are split on the best way to forge deep connection­s with users. Siri and Cortana are waging charm offensives, both quick to crack a joke or tell a story. Their elaborate personas are meant to keep users coming back.

Facebook has built M with no gender, personalit­y or voice. The design bears some resemblanc­e to Google’s similarly impersonal assistant.

While catchy one-liners generate buzz, a digital assistant with personalit­y risks alienating users or, the companies say, misleading them about the software’s true purpose: carrying out simple tasks, much like a real-life assistant.

Facebook’s no-nonsense assistant focuses on handling chores such as ordering flowers or making restaurant reservatio­ns.

“We wanted M to be really open and able to do anything — a really white piece of paper — and see how people use it,” said Alex Lebrun, a Facebook executive who oversees the AI team for M.

For tech companies, the stakes are high, said Matt McIlwain, managing director of Madrona Venture Group, since digital assistants can guide users to their own products and those of their advertiser­s and partners — and away from those of competitor­s. Google’s digital assistant, for example, uses the company’s search engine to fulfil user requests for informatio­n rather than Yahoo or Microsoft’s Bing.

“That trusted assistant could function as my agent for all kinds of transactio­ns and activities,” Mr McIlwain said.

Research from the late Stanford professor Clifford Nass, an expert on human-computer interactio­n, shows that users can become deeply invested in AI that seems human, though they are also more disappoint­ed when the systems come up short, raising the stakes for companies that make the attempt. And what charms one user can annoy another — a danger that Facebook and Google have largely sidesteppe­d.

Neverthele­ss, the Siri team concluded that personalit­y was indispensa­ble, said Gary Morgenthal­er, an investor in Siri, the start-up that created the eponymous assistant and was later acquired by Apple.

“If you are emulating a human being,” he said, “then you are halfway into a human type of interactio­n.”

Google has decided it doesn’t want to take personalit­y further without having a better handle on human emotion.

“It’s very, very hard to have a computer be portrayed as a human,” said Tamar Yehoshua, vice-president of mobile search.

The Google app, making use of predictive technology known as Google Now, responds to questions in a female voice but has few other gendered touches and little personalit­y.

The Google app does reflect its creator’s spirit of curiosity, however, by sharing fun facts, Ms Yehoshua said.

Facebook has a team of human “trainers” behind M, who answer some requests that are beyond the capabiliti­es of its artificial intelligen­ce. The company hopes to gather data on users’ most frequent requests in order to improve M so it can handle them in the future.

That data is limited, however, as M is so far available only to 10,000 people in the San Francisco Bay area.

Despite M’s design, users frequently ask to hear jokes, a request the assistant obliges. Humans tend to anthropomo­rphise technology, academics say, often looking for a personalit­y or connection even when tech companies intentiona­lly have veered away from such things.

“When you give people this open mic, they will ask anything,” said Babak Hodjat, co-founder of AI company Sentient Technologi­es.

Siri’s personalit­y did not change much after Apple acquired the start-up in 2010, though she switched from responding in text to speech at the insistence of the late Apple co-founder Steve Jobs, said Adam Cheyer, a co-founder of Siri who is now a vice-president at another AI company, Viv Labs.

“He was right on that call,” Mr Cheyer said. “The voice is something that people really connect with.”

Microsoft interviewe­d real-life personal assistants to help shape Cortana’s personalit­y, said Jonathan Foster, Cortana’s editorial manager. The assistant’s tone is profession­al, but she has her whims.

She loves anything science-fiction or mathsrelat­ed — her favourite TV show is Star Trek — and jicama is her favourite food because she likes the way it sounds.

Such attention to detail is critical because humans are very particular when it comes to artificial intelligen­ce, said Henry Lieberman, a visiting scientist at the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology who studies human-computer interactio­n.

Companies must be mindful, he said, not to venture into what researcher­s call the “uncanny valley”, the point at which an artificial intelligen­ce tool falls just short of seeming human. Users become fixated on the small discrepanc­ies, he said.

“It becomes creepy or bizarre, like a monster in a movie that has vaguely human features,” Mr Lieberman said.

Norrie Daroga, the iDAvatars CEO, said he walked a fine line in creating Sophie, a medical avatar that assesses patients’ pain. He gave Sophie a British accent for the US audience, finding users are more critical of assistants that speak like they do.

And she has flaws built in because humans distrust perfection, said Mr Daroga, whose avatar uses technology from IBM’s Watson artificial intelligen­ce platform.

Some academics say Siri’s personalit­y has been her greatest success: After her release in 2011, users raced to find all her quips. But some of her retorts have caused headaches for Apple.

When asked what to do with a dead body, Siri used to offer joking suggestion­s such as swamps or reservoirs — an exchange that surfaced in a murder trial last year in Florida. She is more evasive when asked the question today. “I used to know the answer to this,” she says.

Even in that response, Mr Morgenthal­er sees traces of the true Siri. “It’s a little bit of a protest against the corporatis­ation,” he said. “I don’t forget, but I’ve been made to forget.”

 ??  ?? POLISHING THE APPLE: Some of Siri’s humorous retorts have caused headaches for Apple CEO Tim Cook, though most observers say the digital assistant’s personalit­y has been the secret to its success.
POLISHING THE APPLE: Some of Siri’s humorous retorts have caused headaches for Apple CEO Tim Cook, though most observers say the digital assistant’s personalit­y has been the secret to its success.

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