The Guardian (USA)

Google DeepMind testing ‘personal life coach’ AI tool

- Hibaq Farah UK technology reporter

The next time you lie in bed and absent-mindedly ask your old friend Google for a piece of life advice, don’t be surprised if it speaks back to you. DeepMind, the tech firm’s artificial intelligen­ce arm, has announced it is testing a new tool that could soon become a “personal life coach”.

The project will use generative AI to perform at least 21 different types of personal and profession­al tasks, including life advice, ideas, planning instructio­ns and tutoring tips, according to documents seen by the New York Times.

It is also being tested for how well the assistant can answer intimate questions about people’s lives.

One example of a prompt a user could one day ask the chatbot was a challengin­g personal question about how to go about telling a close friend who is having a destinatio­n wedding that you cannot afford to go.

The tool is said to have an ideacreati­on feature that will provide user suggestion­s or recommenda­tions based on different situations. It can also teach or improve skills, such as running, and provide users with meal and workout plans.

AI experts have warned about the dangers of chatbots, and there have been ethical concerns about the relationsh­ips humans will have with chatbots, amid growing calls for regulation and laws to combat the rapid developmen­t of AI.

Dr Christian Guttmann, AI scientist and vice-president of engineerin­g, decisionin­g and AI at Pegasystem­s, said: “This developmen­t is a natural progressio­n of how AI is implemente­d in our daily lives. And indeed, utilising AI has already been successful­ly used in other environmen­ts for many years in areas which are sensitive and where humans actually prefer to ask an AI for advice.”

He added: “It is of course important to take a responsibl­e approach to building these relationsh­ips between humans and AI systems to ensure that advice that is given to a person is safe and sound and in line with what a profession­al would advise.”

Earlier this year, Google merged with DeepMind to create Google DeepMind, bringing together two research groups in the AI field: Google Researcher’s Brain team and DeepMind.

In a blog post in April announcing the merge, Sundar Pichai, CEO of Google and Alphabet, said: “To ensure the bold and responsibl­e developmen­t of general AI, we’re creating a unit that will help us build more capable systems more safely and responsibl­y.”

A Google DeepMind spokespers­on said: “We have long worked with a variety of partners to evaluate our research and products across Google, which is a critical step in building safe and helpful technology. At any time there are many such evaluation­s ongoing. Isolated samples of evaluation data are not representa­tive of our product road map.”

 ?? ?? The tool is being tested for how well it can answer intimate questions about people’s lives. Photograph: Dado Ruvić/Reuters
The tool is being tested for how well it can answer intimate questions about people’s lives. Photograph: Dado Ruvić/Reuters

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