
Alexa, play some classical music.
Alexa, set an alarm for 7am.
Alexa, will you marry me?
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THEY sit unobtrusively in your home and, with a simple command, check the weather, play a song or set a kitchen timer, rendering many of lifeâs routine tasks hands-free. Voice-activated devices like the Google Home and Amazon Echo â which responds to the name âAlexaâ â are designed to make your life easier.
They seem to have struck a chord â . But they arenât just a convenience. The way we interact with these devices is beginning to betray a more complex relationship between humans and machines.
Daren Gill, director of product management for the Alexa personal assistant used by Amazonâs Echo, says he has been surprised by how often people try to engage the assistant in purely social interaction. âEvery day, hundreds of thousands of people say âgood morningâ to Alexa,â he says. Half a million people have professed their love. More than 250,000 have proposed. You could write these off as jokes, but one of the most popular interactions is âthank youâ â which means people are bothering to be polite to a piece of technology.
âThe really disruptive part, I think, is the difference between treating something as a tool and treating something as an agent,â says , a social roboticist at Carnegie Mellon University in Pennsylvania. So why are we getting so attached to a jacked-up smart speaker?
Devices have been doing our bidding for years, thanks to voice recognition technology in phone-based assistants like Appleâs Siri and Microsoftâs Cortana. However, subtle differences in the interface design of the new home assistants make us regard them more as characters, says Knight â like a friendly concierge, perhaps, or even a personal secretary (see âThe invisible womanâ).
For example, unlike Siri or Cortana, you donât need to press a button or fumble for your phone to invoke Alexa once youâve set up your Echo. The device is constantly âlisteningâ for its name (Alexa comes as standard, but the user can change the word that wakes it up to âAmazonâ or âEchoâ). Call, and it will respond to your request, just as you might say a friendâs name to get their attention.
â500,000
Number of people who have told Alexa âI love youââ
Using speech in this way means the interface âalmost disappearsâ, says Gill. Communicating by speech comes naturally to most of us, which makes talking to Alexa feel a lot more seamless than typing commands into a computer. Thanks to natural language processing and machine learning, it understands your requests without you having to speak robotically or learn specific phrases. âWe want people to interact the way they would with friends,â says Gill. The team was inspired by the computer in the TV series Star Trek.
Another design advantage comes simply from where we keep the devices, which are designed for use at home. âTheyâre in a very intimate space, and thatâs going to change the way we think about them,â says Knight. Add the Echoâs unassuming physical design â essentially a cylinder with an LED at the top â and the device quickly becomes a familiar presence. âIt almost becomes like a family pet,â says , director of the University College London Interaction Centre.
Trust me
But itâs not a pet. Neither the Echo nor the Google Home look like a robot. They donât move. They donât have a face. So why are we so ready to bestow a social role on something that looks so undeniably mechanical?
Social robotics research has shown that we canât help treating technology like people. It doesnât have to be fancy â the response is elicited even by relatively primitive kit. In a , Clifford Nass and his team at Stanford University asked people to assess the performance of a desktop computer. They gave more positive feedback if they entered their response into the computer itself rather than into an identical one â just as you may be less critical to someoneâs face than behind their back.
And despite their apparent simplicity, the home assistants offer other cues that make us treat them socially. âSometimes we can be tuned to think about things as having faces even if they donât have eyes or a mouth, just by things like orientation,â says Knight. The Echoâs LED ring lights up in the direction of your voice when you say its name, for instance, which sends a cue about where the device is focusing its attention. This non-verbal behaviour is very powerful, says Knight. âWe really care when people hear us.â
In fact, she says, the home assistantâs minimalist design can be an asset in convincing us to form relationships with them as we are so good at projecting ideas of character onto a blank canvas. Interestingly, humanoid robots have a much harder time living up to our expectations.
âOver 100,000 a day
Number of people who say âgood morningâ to Alexaâ
All this raises the question of whether there could be any negative consequences of our willingness to treat these devices like the friends we share our intimate thoughts with. Itâs easy to forget when building a rapport with Alexa that all your whispered sweet nothings are being collected and processed by Amazon.
Devices that constantly listen out for commands pose particular concerns if they accidentally pick up audio someone didnât intend to record, or if the data is used for other purposes, says at the University of California, Berkeley. He encourages people to examine privacy policies and thinks manufacturers should be more transparent about how they use peopleâs data. Amazon says users can delete any records of their communications with Alexa, both on the app and the server.
â250,000
Number of people who have proposed to Alexaâ
That said, at the moment, Alexa doesnât remember much about you. The only way to personalise it â so that it remembers what city to give the weather forecast for, for example â is by feeding that information into an app.
This may explain why most personal questions are likely to elicit its standard deflection: âSorry, I did not understand.â (Or, if you are lucky, it makes a joke: when I suggested marriage, Alexa replied that she thought we should just be friends.)
But all this could change as home assistants become more personable. The next step for Alexa is a capacity for longer and more dynamic dialogues, says Gill. Amazon also has a âlong road map of personalisationâ, he says, to allow your device to get to know you better, perhaps learning what books or music you like.
As these machines become more personable, the way we treat them could inform the design of more advanced technology.
Jibo, a personal robot designed for the home and set for release in 2017, builds on the simple movements and subtle cues of todayâs home assistants. It might cock its âheadâ to indicate itâs listening, for example, or blink its âeyeâ to acknowledge a request.
Technologies like Alexa are just the beginning, says Knight â ârobot protozoaâ, waiting to crawl out of the water onto land.
The invisible woman
Ask people about Alexa and they wonât talk about it â theyâll talk about her. After all, âsheâ has a female name and speaks with a feminine voice. Sheâs not the only one: Microsoftâs Cortana is voiced by a woman, as is Google Assistant, the voice service that powers the Google Home.
Why? Amazonâs Daren Gill says Alexaâs developers tried many different voices, male and female, and selected the final voice based on what users preferred to hear.
But technology product designer questions if applying female gender cues to virtual assistants risks perpetuating gender stereotypes (see âLazy coding is teaching software to be sexistâ). The roles these devices take on â personal assistant, secretary, carer â are often categorised as âwomenâs workâ. Characterising devices that tackle these tasks as female could further cement this gender trope. Perhaps this is why people might find female voices for these applications more pleasing in the first place.
Yvonne Rogers at University College London suggests users could be given the option to use a male or female voice as is the case with Appleâs Siri and many GPS systems. But Gill says Amazon stuck with one voice for Alexa to focus its efforts on optimising the technology.
This article appeared in print under the headline âHome invasionâ