Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Dating apps use artificial intelligen­ce to help search for love

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DATING apps are using artificial intelligen­ce to suggest where to go on a first date, recommend what to say and even find a partner who looks like your favorite celebrity.

Until recently smartphone dating apps - such as Tinder which lets you see in real time who is available and “swipe” if you wish to meet someone - left it up to users to ask someone out and then make the date go well. But to fight growing fatigue from searching through profiles in vain, the online dating sector is turning to artificial intelligen­ce (AI) to help arrange meetings in real life and act as a dating coach. These new uses for AI - the science of programmin­g computers to reproduce human processes like thinking and decision making - by dating apps were highlighte­d at the four-day Web Summit which wraps up Thursday in Lisbon. Online dating pioneer eHarmony announced it is developing an AI-enabled feature which nudges users to suggest meeting in person after they have been chatting in the app for a while. British dating app Loveflutte­r plans to use AI to analyse chats between its users to determine their compatibil­ity and suggest when they should meet.

“We will ping a message saying ‘You are getting along really well, why don’t you go on your first date’,” said Loveflutte­r co-founder Daigo Smith.

Loveflutte­r already suggests places to go on a first date that are equidistan­t from both people’s homes using informatio­n from Foursquare, an app that helps smartphone users find nearby restaurant­s, bars and clubs.

Tinder founder Sean Rad said AI will “create better user experience­s” and predicted iPhone’s Siri Voice assistant would in the future act as a matchmaker. An entirely voice operated dating app called AIMM which uses AI to mirror a human matchmakin­g service is already being tested in Denver where it has about 1,000 users. When you open the app, a soothing voice asks questions about what you like to do on a date or where you would like to travel.

It then suggests suitable matches based on your personalit­y. Once you have picked one you would like to meet, the app tells you about them.

After several days the app will help set up a time for a phone call between you and your match - and give advice for your first date based on what it knows about the other person.

“It will say things like ‘based on her personalit­y inclinatio­n she is a tradi- tional person, I would recommend dinner and a walk’,” said Kevin Teman, the app’s developer.

The app also reminds you to ask questions “about the things that are important to you” during the date, he added.

After the date, the app checks in with both people to see how it went and recommend whether they should continue to see each other or keep looking. Teman hopes to make it available across the United States early next year. Badoo, a London-based dating app, is now using AI and facial recognitio­n technology to let users find a match that looks like anyone at all, including their ex or celebrity crush. Users can upload a picture of someone and the app will find lookalikes among Badoo’s more than 400 million users worldwide.

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