"By
allowing you to interact with a lifelike digital avatar of your loved
one, you can find solace in expressing your love and forgiveness,
creating a bridge to the cherished moments you hold dear," the company
says on its website. The tool "allows you to see and hear your parents
as they were in their cherished photos, rather than just imagining
them."
In a June paper
published in the Association for Computing Machinery by lead researcher
Jed Brubaker, an associate professor at the University of Colorado
Boulder who studies socio-technical systems, Manning and his colleagues
observed study participants' reactions to the AI ghosts of people they
have lost.
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"Participants filled out a simple survey sharing positive memories of
a loved one, talking about their upbringing and core traits," he
explained. "And they were fascinated by how much an LLM can do with so
little information."
There are two basic kinds of generative
ghosts, according to Manning. A simple "death bot" could be limited to
playing back verbatim any statements recorded by a loved one, but would
be incapable of simulating the deceased's manner of communication.
"You
can get a reasonable, although thin representation of a loved one with a
single prompt on a free ChatGPT account," Brubaker said. "The same way
you might prompt it to say, 'Talk to me like Shakespeare,' you can say,
'Talk to me like my grandfather — here are some details about how he
acted.'"
Continuing the conversation
Generative ghosts go
significantly further by recreating the deceased's voice and manner of
communication, and offering the ability to interact with the living,
even responding to questions in a recognizably familiar way.
"They are capable of saying things a loved one might not have said.
Ghosts are AI models that can talk for somebody, maybe answering a
question that they didn't answer when they were alive," Manning said.
The cost to consumers
is variable. Re;memory charges $24 a month for individuals to create
three custom avatars. For $19.99 per month, Sceance AI users can create
animated images of their loved ones that can smile, make gentle head
movements and speak in the deceased's voice.
The researchers
found that study participants generally preferred communicating with an
AI "ghost" of their loved one in the first person, with the chatbot
serving as a direct reincarnation, rather than an avatar speaking in the
third person. One turnoff: if a bot used a term of endearment, like
"champ" or "pal," that their loved one typically didn't say, a user
wanted to end the interaction.
Generative ghosts share some commonalities with so-called deepfakes,
which can be designed to mislead the public by fabricating a public
figure's speech and actions. But Brubaker said there is a distinct
difference.
"The fundamental premise of a deep fake is the intent
to deceive," Brubaker said. "The intent of generative ghosts is not to
deceive another person."
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