‘Artificial humans’ create stir as potential TV anchors, actors, companions

HE’S REAL, SHE’S DIGITAL At a Las Vegas tech show on Tuesday, Samsung demonstrates “artificial humans” or detailed, AI-powered animations displayed at human
scale and said to be capable of conversing and sympathizing like real people. —AFP

LAS VEGAS — Avatars touted as “artificial humans” created a buzz on Tuesday at the Consumer Electronics Show even as debate swirled on what exactly the digital entities were.

Star Labs, a startup funded by Samsung, showed the painstakingly detailed AI-powered, two-dimensional digital creations to a large crowd, saying they are able to “converse and sympathize” like real people.

A demonstration at CES showed conversations and gestures from the digital creations modeled after real humans.

According to the California-based unit of the South Korean company, the technology allows for the creation of customized digital beings that can appear on displays or video games and could be designed to be “TV anchors, spokespeople, or movie actors” or even “companions and friends.”

Pranav Mistry, chief executive of the lab, said the creations known as Neons were modeled after people but can show highly detailed expressions and gestures, and even new characteristics that can be programmed.

Sharing the magic

“They look very human, in part because they are modeled after a human,” but can even speak in languages the person hadn’t spoken before, Mistry said.

In developing the creations, Mistry said it “felt like magic to us and we wanted to share this magic.”

According to Star Labs, Neon is inspired “by the rhythmic complexities of nature and extensively trained with how humans look, behave and interact.”

While digital avatars have long been able to be programmed for specific tasks such as role players in games, Neon goes further by enabling interactions that can incorporate human emotion.

Although the artificial humans may borrow features from real people, “each Neon has his or her own unique personality and can show new expressions, movements and dialogues,” the company said.

The Neon creators said the new virtual humans were the product of advances in technologies including neural networks and computational reality.

Generating doubts

But the invention did not impress everyone.

Ben Wood of the consultancy CCS Insight said he was “underwhelmed” after seeing the Neons.

He tweeted that, on the booth, they just looked like “videos of actors which can be manipulated to do certain actions. I must be missing something.”

Avi Greengart of the consultancy Techsponential said the avatars could be realistic but also “creepy.”

“Leaving aside how impressive the technology is, will Neon be used in ways that people like, just tolerate, or actively hate?” he said.

Jack Gold, an analyst at J. Gold Associates, said Samsung may be ahead of the pack if it can develop avatars that can show emotions and expressions, but also questioned the potential for abuse.

“It has major implications for many fields like customer service, help desk functions, entertainment, and of course could also be used to ‘fake’ a human interacting with a live person for bad or illegal purposes.”

‘Deepfakes’

The announcement comes amid a proliferation of AI-manipulated computer videos known as “deepfakes” and growing concerns about how they could be used to deceive or manipulate.

But Mistry said the computation techniques of deepfakes were “completely different” than those used for Neon.

He said his technology “doesn’t manipulate any content” but “creates the content as it goes along.”

He maintained that “no one will ever have access to the technology at its core, and that is what we are designing from the ground up.”

Mistry offered no specifics on the company’s business model but suggested partner firms may want to use these digital creations for various services.

The India-born Mistry was known for developing Sixth Sense, a gesture-based wearable technology system built at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

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