From tracking moods to putting on a show, it's AI-everything at CES

From tracking moods to putting on a show, it's AI-everything at CES

At CES, a French tech start-up introduces the Emobot, an AI-backed device that monitors the emotional state of the elderly
At CES, a French tech start-up introduces the Emobot, an AI-backed device that monitors the emotional state of the elderly. Photo: Robyn BECK / AFP
Source: AFP

PAY ATTENTION: Сheck out news that is picked exactly for YOU ➡️ find the “Recommended for you” block on the home page and enjoy!

Entrepreneur Antony Perzo introduces a small device called Emobot, which looks like a cross between a speaker and a piece of abstract art, and explains: "It's an emotional thermometer!"

Like hundreds of other exhibitors at CES, the world's biggest tech expo, French engineer Perzo is selling the merits of an object that depends on the latest breakthroughs in artificial intelligence.

AI is the big buzzword at the Las Vegas tech extravaganza, with companies big and small unveiling anything from TVs to toothbrushes that depend on big data and connected computing to impress.

Perzo's Emobot, shown in a corner of Sin City's Venetian hotel, is used to detect possible psychiatric disorders in the elderly and could help caregivers in nursing homes adjust treatment without waiting for the next visit from the psychiatrist.

Read also

'Gut punch': Meta bruised in EU data fight

The technology can "analyze micro facial expressions" that reflect human emotions, themselves a magnifier of our "psychological and psychiatric state", said the engineer.

In Last Vegas, AI-powered gadgets cram the hallways -- there are AI bird feeders, baby carriages or fatigue-fighting wristwatches -– to the point that some wonder if the phenomenon is being oversold and used as a marketing tactic rather than to show an actual breakthrough.

PAY ATTENTION: Share your outstanding story with our editors! Please reach us through info@corp.legit.ng!

But AI "isn't just a buzzword to win its CES bingo," noted tech analyst Avi Greengart.

The technology "is used in smartphone cameras, in factories to spot defective products, in agriculture to identify weeds and spray them with weed killer. AI is here to stay,” he said.

Using AI to explore emotions is also the ambition of Emil Jimenez, who founded MindBank Ai in a "quest for immortality...so my daughter could always ask her daddy a question."

Read also

UK's Extinction Rebellion pauses radical tactics to seek wider support

His app ask users to record their answers to deeply personal questions ("What does love mean to you?") in order to "save your mind forever on the cloud."

But the service has won over some users on the promise of knowing yourself better while you're alive. Today it can analyze voice recordings and one day hopes his app will analyze just your tone of voice to decipher moods.

'Huge opportunity'

Technology backed by Artificial Intelligence is a major theme of CES 2023, the annual gadget expo in Las Vegas
Technology backed by Artificial Intelligence is a major theme of CES 2023, the annual gadget expo in Las Vegas. Photo: Patrick T. Fallon / AFP
Source: AFP

AI can also be used to understand crowds. Canadian company Advanced Symbolics has developed Ask Polly, which trawls through social media to conduct market research in just minutes.

The user asks it a question -- for example, "Is this a good time to buy an apartment?" or "Should underage criminals go to jail?" -- and the program scans social networks like Twitter, TikTok, Reddit and Instagram to survey public opinion on a large scale.

The biggest AI headlines lately have been on algorithms that make it possible to create original content at the click of a mouse.

Read also

Lady attempts to replicate Tubo's delicate corset dress, fashion lovers unimpressed

The California-based company OpenAI has impressed with ChatGPT, a simple to use software that generates a poem or school essay in seconds, and DALL- E which creates visual art.

Following in their wake, French start-up Imki has designed a sound and light show for the ancient Roman theater in southern France using similar programs.

"This allows us to create content quickly with very low production costs", said Marie Lathoud, marketing director of Imki.

While she sees AI as a tool for artists, Saket Dandotia, director of operations at Magnifi, recognizes that so-called generative AI represents a threat to the designers it will replace, much like robots in factories.

AI tools like ChatGBT are "faster, less costly," Dandotia said.

His team created Strobe, an automated video software. "For us, AI is a huge opportunity, which will transform the entire creative design industry," he said

Source: AFP

Authors:
AFP avatar

AFP AFP text, photo, graphic, audio or video material shall not be published, broadcast, rewritten for broadcast or publication or redistributed directly or indirectly in any medium. AFP news material may not be stored in whole or in part in a computer or otherwise except for personal and non-commercial use. AFP will not be held liable for any delays, inaccuracies, errors or omissions in any AFP news material or in transmission or delivery of all or any part thereof or for any damages whatsoever. As a newswire service, AFP does not obtain releases from subjects, individuals, groups or entities contained in its photographs, videos, graphics or quoted in its texts. Further, no clearance is obtained from the owners of any trademarks or copyrighted materials whose marks and materials are included in AFP material. Therefore you will be solely responsible for obtaining any and all necessary releases from whatever individuals and/or entities necessary for any uses of AFP material.