Skip to main content

People will be intimate with robots in the coming five years

Sex with robots may sound sci-fi, but finding a silicon soulmate is closer to reality than we think, says a British researcher. Human-like robots with all the working parts will make their way onto consumer markets in the next five years; in 20 years they will become socially accepted; and by 2050 the first human-robot marriage ceremony will take place, says David Levy, the London author of Love and Sex With Robots. About 100 students and faculty attended Levy's guest lecture on human/robot romance Monday at the University of Alberta. "I believe it is inevitable that within five years, people will be having sex with robots," Levy told his audience. There are already companies in the United States and Japan that produce lifelike sex dolls, he said. Consumers can customize their dolls right down to body type and hair style, but current dolls lack interactivity.

It's just a matter of finding an entrepreneur willing to put up the capital to combine these sex dolls with existing artificial intelligence technology to make dolls that can react to their sexual partners through speech and movement, Levy said. From there, as technology advances, the possibilities are limitless. "Imagine a doll with a vibrating penis that has all the sensors and puts its arms around her and says all the right things," said Levy. "If there are articles in mainstream media, like in Cosmo, saying you can have great sex every night of the week, imagine what is going to happen." Existing sex dolls can cost around $10,000, depending on how much they are customized. Combine that with artificial intelligence technology and the cost of a sexbot will be prohibitive at first, so they will be used on a rental basis, Levy predicted.

Similar escort services using sex dolls already exist in Japan and South Korea, he said. As technology becomes more mainstream everything comes down in price. Levy expects this shift to happen in the next 20 years. "With plasma television screens, the cost was prohibitive at first," he said. Sexbots won't be all about love and intimacy. "There will be many people who will want sex with robots without any emotional attachment," Levy said. "They don't have to buy their date drinks or take them on expensive vacations." For the skeptics in the audience, Levy outlined how much the institution of marriage has changed. Today divorce is commonplace and interracial and gay marriages are accepted, practices that people never would have imagined even 50 years ago.

"I believe that by 2050 people in large numbers will be falling in love with robots and marrying them in large numbers," he said. Levy predicts the first robot-human marriage will take place in the state of Massachusetts. It's a natural fit, in a liberal state with a high concentration of artificial intelligence researchers, he said. Levy's PhD thesis, Intimate Relationships with Artificial Partners, and his resulting book have created a media frenzy and ensuing interviews with the Colbert Report, Playboy and Scientific American, among others. Source: Canada.com.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Charging Implanted Heart Pumps Wirelessly

Mechanical pumps to give failing hearts a boost were originally developed as temporary measures for patients awaiting a heart transplant. But as the technology has improved, these ventricular assist devices commonly operate in patients for years, including in former vice-president Dick Cheney, whose implant this month celebrates its one-year anniversary. Prolonged use, however, has its own problems. The power cord that protrudes through the patient's belly is cumbersome and prone to infection over time. Infections occur in close to 40 percent of patients, are the leading cause of rehospitalization, and can be fatal. Researchers at the University of Washington and the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center have tested a wireless power system for ventricular assist devices. They recently presented the work in Washington, D.C. at the American Society for Artificial Internal Organs annual meeting, where it received the Willem Kolff/Donald B. Olsen Award for most promising research in

Autism and Eye Contact: Genes very much are involved

We have now a lot of evidence on genetic components in many disorders including neurological in both adults and kids. Autism is one such problem that has many genes involved. Research is still in full swing to find more genes and related pathways. However, one can find autistic features more phenotypically before genotyping. Eye contact is one of them. Studies have shown that autistic kids make less eye contact. This has been shown to have genetic component now. New research has uncovered compelling evidence that genetics plays a major role in how children look at the world and whether they have a preference for gazing at people's eyes and faces or at objects. The discovery by researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis and Emory University School of Medicine in Atlanta adds new detail to understanding the causes of autism spectrum disorder. The results show that the moment-to-moment movements of children's eyes as they seek visual information about the

How much people depend on weather reports

Meteorologists on television, radio, online, and in newspapers supply weather reports to the average person over 100 times a month. Surveys demonstrated that the 300 billion forecasts accessed generate a value of $285 per household every year, or $32 billion for the entire United States. Odds are you have already watched one weather forecast today and will probably check out a few more. Accurate, timely forecasts are vital to everyday life, but just how critical may surprise you. Whether at work or play, you probably watch the weather quite closely. Most of us are at the weather person's mercy to know what to wear, what to expect, to prepare for the worst. New research shows the average United States household checks out a weather report more than three times a day. "It impacts pretty much every part of every activity we are involved with for the most part," Jeff Lazo, the director of the Societal Impacts Program at the National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) in B