Amazon is devising a way for users to speak to their family members through its Alexa voice assistant, even after they’ve died.
At Amazon’s Re:Mars conference in Las Vegas on Wednesday, Rohit Prasad, senior vice president and head scientist for the Alexa team, detailed a feature that allows the voice assistant to replicate a specific human voice.
In a demonstration video, a child said, “Alexa, can grandma finish reading me the Wizard of Oz?”
Alexa confirmed the request with the default, robotic voice, then immediately switched to a softer, more humanlike tone, seemingly mimicking the child’s family member.
The Alexa team developed a model that allows its voice assistant to produce a high-quality voice with “less than a minute of recorded audio,” Prasad said.
The feature is currently in development, Prasad said. Amazon declined to say when the feature will roll out to the public.
While the feature could ostensibly be used to replicate any voice, Prasad suggested it could help memorialize a deceased family member.
Making artificial intelligence conversational and companion-like has become a key focus, especially during the Covid-19 pandemic, when “so many of us have lost someone we love,” Prasad said.
“While AI can’t eliminate that pain of loss, it can definitely make the memories last,” he added.
Amazon wants to make conversing with Alexa more natural in general, and has rolled out a series of features that enable its voice assistant to replicate more human-like dialogue, and even ask a user questions.