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How virtual reality can create the ultimate empathy machine

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    Virtual reality started for me
    in sort of an unusual place.
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    It was the 1970s.
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    I got into the field very young:
    I was seven years old.
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    And the tool that I used
    to access virtual reality
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    was the Evel Knievel stunt cycle.
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    This is a commercial for
    that particular item:
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    (Video) Voice-over: What a jump!
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    Evel's riding the amazing stunt cycle.
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    That gyro-power sends him
    over 100 feet at top speed.
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    Chris Milk: So this was my joy back then.
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    I rode this motorcycle everywhere.
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    And I was there with Evel Knievel; we
    jumped the Snake River Canyon together.
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    I wanted the rocket.
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    I never got the rocket,
    I only got the motorcycle.
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    I felt so connected to this world.
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    I didn't want to be a storyteller
    when I grew up, I wanted to be stuntman.
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    I was there. Evel Knievel was my friend.
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    I had so much empathy for him.
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    But it didn't work out. (Laughter)
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    I went to art school.
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    I started making music videos.
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    And this is one of the early
    music videos that I made:
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    (Music: "Touch the Sky" by Kanye West)
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    CM: You may notice
    some slight similarities here.
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    (Laughter)
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    And I got that rocket.
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    (Laughter)
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    So, now I'm a filmmaker,
    or, the beginning of a filmmaker,
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    and I started using the tools that are
    available to me as a filmmaker
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    to try to tell the most compelling stories
    that I can to an audience.
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    And film is this incredible medium
    that allows us to feel empathy
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    for people that are very different than us
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    and worlds completely
    foreign from our own.
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    Unfortunately,
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    Evel Knievel did not feel the same
    empathy for us that we felt for him,
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    and he sued us for this video --
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    (Laughter) --
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    shortly thereafter.
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    On the upside, the man
    that I worshipped as a child,
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    the man that I wanted
    to become as an adult,
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    I was finally able to get his autograph.
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    (Applause)
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    Let's talk about film now.
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    Film, it's an incredible medium,
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    but essentially, it's the same
    now as it was then.
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    It's a group of rectangles that are
    played in a sequence.
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    And we've done incredible things
    with those rectangles.
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    But I started thinking about,
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    is there a way that I can use modern
    and developing technologies
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    to tell stories in different ways
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    and tell different kinds of stories
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    that maybe I couldn't tell using
    the traditional tools of filmmaking
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    that we've been using for 100 years?
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    So I started experimenting,
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    and what I was trying to do was
    to build the ultimate empathy machine.
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    And here's one of the early experiments:
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    (Music)
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    So this is called
    "The Wilderness Downtown."
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    It was a collaboration with Arcade Fire.
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    It asked you to put in the address
    where you grew up at the beginning of it.
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    It's a website.
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    And out of it starts growing these little
    boxes with different browser windows.
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    And you see this teenager
    running down a street,
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    and then you see Google Street View
    and Google Maps imagery
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    and you realize the street
    he's running down is yours.
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    And when he stops in front of a house,
    he stops in front of your house.
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    And this was great, and I saw people
    having an even deeper emotional reaction
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    to this than the things that
    I had made in rectangles.
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    And I'm essentially taking
    a piece of your history
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    and putting it inside
    the framing of the story.
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    But then I started thinking,
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    okay, well that's a part of you,
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    but how do I put all of you
    inside of the frame?
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    So to do that, I started
    making art installations.
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    And this is one called
    "The Treachery of Sanctuary."
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    It's a triptych. I'm going to show
    you the third panel.
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    (Music)
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    So now I've got you inside of the frame,
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    and I saw people having even more
    visceral emotional reactions
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    to this work than the previous one.
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    But then I started thinking about frames,
    and what do they represent?
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    And a frame is just a window.
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    I mean, all the media that we watch --
    television, cinema --
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    they're these windows into
    these other worlds.
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    And I thought, well, great.
    I got you in a frame.
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    But I don't want you in the frame,
    I don't want you in the window,
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    I want you through the window,
    I want you on the other side,
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    in the world, inhabiting the world.
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    So that leads me back to virtual reality.
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    Let's talk about virtual reality.
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    Unfortunately,
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    talking about virtual reality
    is like dancing about architecture.
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    And this is actually someone dancing
    about architecture in virtual reality.
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    (Laughter)
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    So, it's difficult to explain.
    Why is it difficult to explain?
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    It's difficult because it's a very
    experiential medium.
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    You feel your way inside of it.
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    It's a machine, but inside of it,
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    it feels like real life,
    it feels like truth.
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    And you feel present in the world
    that you're inside
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    and you feel present with the people
    that you're inside of it with.
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    So, I'm going to show you a demo
    of a virtual reality film:
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    a full-screeen version of
    all the information
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    that we capture when
    we shoot virtual reality.
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    So we're shooting in every direction.
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    This is a camera system that we built
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    that has 3D cameras that look
    in every direction
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    and binaural microphones
    that face in very direction.
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    We take this and we build, basically,
    a sphere of a world that you inhabit.
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    So what I'm going to show you
    is not a view into the world,
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    it's basically the whole world
    stretched into a rectangle.
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    So this film is called
    "Clouds Over Sidra,"
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    and it was made in conjunction with
    our virtual reality company called VRSE
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    and the United Nations,
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    and a co-collaborator named Gabo Arora.
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    And we went to a Syrian refugee camp
    in Jordan in December
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    and shot the story of a 12-year-old
    girl there named Sidra.
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    And she and her family fled Syria
    through the desert into Jordan
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    and she's been living in this
    camp for the last year and a half.
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    (Video) Sidra: My name is Sidra,
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    I am 12-years-old.
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    I am in the fifth grade.
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    I am from Syria in the Daraa province
    in (?).
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    I have lived here in the Zaatari camp
    in Jordan for the last year and a half.
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    I have a big family:
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    Three brothers, one is a baby.
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    He cries a lot.
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    I asked my father if I cried when
    I was a baby and he says I did not.
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    I think I was a stronger baby
    than my brother."
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    Chris Milk: So, when you're inside
    of the headset.
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    you're not seeing it like this.
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    You're looking around through this world.
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    You'll notice you see full
    360 degrees in all directions.
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    And when you're sitting there
    in her room, watching her,
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    you're not watching it through
    a television screen,
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    you're not watching it through a window,
    you're sitting there with her.
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    When you look down, you're sitting
    on the same ground that she's sitting on.
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    And because of that,
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    you feel her humanity in a deeper way.
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    You empathize with her in a deeper way.
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    And I think that we can change
    minds with this machine.
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    And we've already started
    to try to change a few.
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    So we took this film to the World Economic
    Forum in Davos in January.
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    And we showed it to a group of people
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    whose decisions affect the lives
    of millions of people.
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    And these are people
    who might not otherwise
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    be sitting in a tent
    in a refugee camp in Jordan.
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    But, in January, one afternoon
    in Switzerland,
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    they suddenly all found themselves there.
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    (Applause)
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    And they were affected by it.
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    So we're going to make more of them.
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    We're working with the
    United Nations right now
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    to shoot a whole series of these films.
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    We just finished shooting
    a story in Liberia.
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    And now, we're going
    to shoot a story in India.
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    And we're taking these films,
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    and we're showing them
    at the United Nations
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    to people that work there and people
    who are visiting there.
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    And we're showing
    them to the people
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    that can actually change the lives
    of the people inside of the films.
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    And that's where I think we just
    start to scratch the surface
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    of the true power of virtual reality.
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    It's not a video game peripheral.
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    It connects humans to other humans
    in a profound way
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    that I've never seen before
    in any other form of media.
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    And it can change people's
    perception of each other.
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    And that's how I think
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    virtual reality has the potential
    to actually change the world.
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    So, it's a machine,
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    but through this machine
    we become more compassionate,
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    we become more empathetic,
    and we become more connected.
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    And ultimately, we become more human.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
How virtual reality can create the ultimate empathy machine
Speaker:
Chris Milk
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
10:16

English subtitles

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