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This app knows how you feel — from the look on your face

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    Our emotions influence
    every aspect of our lives,
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    from our health and how we learn
    to how we do business and make decisions,
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    big ones and small.
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    Our emotions also influence
    how we connect with one another.
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    We've evolved to live
    in a world like this,
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    but instead, we're living
    more and more of our lives like this.
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    -- This is the text message
    from my daughter last night --
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    in a world that's devoid of emotion.
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    So I'm on a mission to change that.
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    I want to bring emotions
    back into our digital experiences.
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    I started on this path 15 years ago.
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    I was a computer scientist in Egypt,
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    and I had just gotten accepted
    to a Ph.D program at Cambridge University.
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    So, I did something quite unusual
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    for a young newlywed Muslim Egyptian wife.
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    With the support of my husband,
    who had to stay in Egypt,
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    I packed my bags and I moved to England.
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    At Cambridge, thousands of miles
    away from home,
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    I realized I was spending
    more hours with my laptop
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    than I did with any other human.
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    Yet despite this intimacy, my laptop
    had absolutely no idea how I was feeling.
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    It had no idea if I was happy,
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    having a bad day, or stressed, confused,
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    and so that got frustrating.
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    Even worse, as I communicated
    online with my family back home,
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    I felt that all my emotions
    disappeared in cyberspace.
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    I was homesick, I was lonely,
    and on some days I was actually crying,
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    but all I had to communicate
    these emotions was this.
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    (Laughter)
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    Today's technology
    has lots of IQ, but no EQ;
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    lots of cognitive intelligence,
    but no emotional intelligence.
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    So that got me thinking, you know,
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    what if our technology
    could sense our emotions?
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    What if our devices could sense
    how we felt and reacted accordingly,
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    just the way an emotionally
    intelligent friend would?
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    Those questions led me and my team
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    to create technologies that can read
    and respond to our emotions,
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    and our starting point was the human face.
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    So our human face happens to be
    one of the most powerful channels
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    that we all use to communicate
    social and emotional state,
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    everything from enjoyment, surprise,
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    empathy, and curiosity.
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    In emotion science, we call each
    facial muscle movement an action unit.
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    So for example, action unit 12,
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    it's not a Hollywood blockbuster,
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    it is actually a lip corner pull,
    which is the main component of a smile.
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    Try it everybody. Let's get
    some smiles going on.
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    Another example is action unit 4.
    It's the brow furrow.
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    It's when you draw your eyebrows together
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    and you create all
    these textures and wrinkles.
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    We don't like them, but it's
    a strong indicator of a negative emotion.
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    So we have about 45 of these action units,
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    and they combine to express
    hundreds of emotions.
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    Teaching a computer to read
    these facial emotions is hard,
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    because these action units,
    they can be fast, they're subtle,
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    and they combine in many different ways.
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    So take, for example,
    the smile and the smirk.
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    They look somewhat similar,
    but they mean very different things.
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    (Laughter)
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    So the smile is positive,
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    a smirk is often negative.
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    Sometimes a smirk
    can make you became famous.
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    But seriously, it's important
    for a computer to be able
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    to tell the difference
    between the two expressions.
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    So how do we do that?
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    We give our algorithms
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    tens of thousands of examples
    of people we know to be smiling,
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    from different ethnicities, ages, genders,
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    and we do the same for smirks.
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    And then, using deep learning,
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    the algorithm looks for all these
    textures and wrinkles
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    and shape changes on our face,
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    and basically learns that all smiles
    have common characteristics,
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    all smirks have subtly
    different characteristics.
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    And the next time it sees a new face,
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    it essentially learns that, you know,
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    this face has the same
    characteristics of a smile,
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    and it says, "Aha, I recognize this.
    This is a smile expression."
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    So the best way to demonstrate
    how this technology works
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    is to try a live demo,
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    so I need a volunteer,
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    preferably someone with a face.
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    (Laughter)
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    Chloe's going to be our volunteer today.
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    So over the past five years, we've moved
    from being a research project at MIT
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    to a company,
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    where my team has worked really hard
    to make this technology work,
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    as we like to say, in the wild.
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    And we've also shrunk it so that
    the core emotion engine
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    works on any mobile device
    with a camera, like this iPad.
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    So let's give this a try.
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    As you can see, the algorithm
    has essentially found Chloe's face,
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    so it's this white bounding box,
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    and it's tracking the main
    feature points on her face,
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    so her eyebrows, her eyes,
    her mouth, and her nose.
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    The question is,
    can it recognize her expression?
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    So we're going to test the machine.
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    So first of all, give me your poker face.
    Yep, awesome. (Laughter)
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    And then as she smiles,
    this is a genuine smile, it's great.
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    So you can see the green bar
    go up as she smiles.
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    Now that was a big smile.
    Can you try, like, a subtle smile
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    to see if the computer can recognize?
    It does recognize subtle smiles as well.
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    We've worked really hard
    to make that happen.
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    And then eyebrow raised,
    indicator of surprise.
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    Brow furrow, which is
    an indicator of confusion.
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    Frown. Yes, perfect.
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    So these are all the different
    action units. There's many more of them.
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    This is just a slimmed down demo.
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    But we call each reading
    an emotion data point,
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    and then they can fire together
    to portray different emotions.
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    So on the right side of the demo,
    like, look like you're happy.
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    So that's joy. Joy fires up.
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    And then give me a disgust face.
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    Try to remember what it was like
    when Zayn left One Direction.
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    (Laughter)
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    Yeah, wrinkle your nose. Awesome.
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    And the valance is actually quite
    negative, so you must have been a big fan.
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    So valance is how positive
    or negative an experience is,
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    and engagement is how
    expressive she is as well.
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    So imagine if Chloe had access
    to this realtime emotion stream,
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    and she could share it
    with anybody she wanted to.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
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    So so far, we have amassed
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    12 billion of these emotion data points.
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    It's the largest emotion
    database in the world.
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    We've collected it
    from 2.9 million face videos,
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    people who have agreed
    to share their emotions with us,
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    and from 75 countries around the world.
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    It's growing every day.
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    It blows my mind away
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    that we can now quantify something
    as personal as our emotions,
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    and we can do it at this scale.
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    So what have we learned to date?
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    Gender.
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    Our data confirms something
    that you might suspect.
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    Women are more expressive than men.
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    Not only do they smile more,
    their smiles last longer,
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    and we can now really quantify
    what it is that men and women
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    respond to differently.
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    Let's do culture: so in the United States,
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    women are 40 percent
    more expressive than men,
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    but curiously, we don't see any difference
    in the U.K. between men and women.
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    (Laughter)
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    Age:
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    people who are 50 years and older
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    are 25 percent more emotive
    than younger people.
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    Women in their 20s smile a lot more
    than men the same age,
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    perhaps a necessity for dating,
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    but perhaps what surprised us
    the most about this data
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    is that we happen
    to be expressive all the time,
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    even when we are sitting
    in front of our devices alone,
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    and it's not just when we're watching
    cat videos on Facebook.
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    We are expressive when we're emailing,
    texting, shopping online,
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    or even doing our taxes.
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    Where is this data used today?
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    In understanding how we engage with media,
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    so understanding virality
    and voting behavior;
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    and also empowering
    or emotion-enabling technology,
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    and I want to share some examples
    that are especially close to my heart.
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    Emotion-enabled wearable glasses
    can help individuals
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    who are visually impaired
    read the faces of others,
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    and it can help individuals
    on the autism spectrum interpret emotion,
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    something that they really struggle with.
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    In education, imagine if
    your learning apps
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    sense that you're confused and slow down,
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    or that you're bored, so it sped up,
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    just like a great teacher would
    in a classroom.
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    What if your wristwatch tracks your mood,
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    or your car sensed that you're tired,
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    or perhaps your fridge
    knows that you're stressed,
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    so it auto-locks to prevent you
    from binge eating. (Laughter)
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    I would like that, yeah.
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    What if, when I was in Cambridge,
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    I had access to my realtime
    emotion stream,
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    and I could share that with my family
    back home in a very natural way,
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    just like I would if we were all
    in the same room together.
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    I think in five years down the line,
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    all our devices are going
    to have an emotion chip,
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    and we won't remember what it was like
    when we couldn't just frown at our device
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    and our device would say, "Hmm,
    you didn't like that, did you."
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    Our biggest challenge is that there are
    so many applications of this technology,
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    my team and I realize that we can't
    build them all ourselves,
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    so we've made this technology available
    so that other developers
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    can get building and get creative.
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    We recognize that
    there are potential risks
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    and potential for abuse,
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    but personally, having spent
    many years doing this,
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    I believe that the benefits to humanity
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    from having emotionally
    intelligent technology
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    far outweigh the potential for misuse.
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    And I invite you all to be
    part of the conversation.
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    The more people who know
    about this technology,
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    the more we can all have a voice
    in how it's being used.
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    So as more and more
    of our lives become digital,
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    we are fighting a losing battle
    trying to curb our usage of devices
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    in order to reclaim our emotions.
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    So what I'm trying to do instead
    is to bring emotions into our technology
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    and make our technologies more responsive.
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    So I want those devices
    that have separated us
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    to bring us back together,
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    and by humanizing technology,
    we have this golden opportunity
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    to re-imagine how we
    connect with machines,
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    and therefore, how we, as human beings,
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    connect with one another.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
This app knows how you feel — from the look on your face
Speaker:
Rana el Kaliouby
Description:

more » « less
Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
11:04
  • Typo in 8:42:
    (...) you're confused and slow down, or that you're bored, so it's SPEED up, just like a great teacher (...)

English subtitles

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