Hidden Brain - Unreal Sex

Episode Date: March 12, 2019

From stone statues to silicone works of art, we have long sought solace and sex from inanimate objects. Time and technology have perfected the artificial lover: today we have life-size silicone love d...olls so finely crafted they feel like works of art. Now, with the help of robotics and artificial intelligence, these dolls are becoming even more like humans. This week we talk with researcher Kate Devlin about the history of the artificial lover, and consider what love and sex look like in the age of robots.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 A word of your listening with small children, this episode is about sex and sexuality. This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedantam. In the summer of 2017, Kate Devlin flew from London to Southern California, rented a Mustang convertible, and drove to an industrial park in San Marcos, a city south of Los Angeles. Her destination, Abyss Creations, a company that makes life-size, sex dolls.
Starting point is 00:00:32 In her new book, Turned On, Science, Sex, and Robots, Kate describes the moment she first gazed up close at a life-size, silicone woman. The detail is incredible. My hand skims the ankle. The toes are perfect, little wrinkles on the joints tiny ridges on the toenails. The sole is crisscrossed with the fine skin lines of a human foot. It's beautiful. Today we explore the long history of the artificial lover. From stone statues to silicone works of art, we have long sought solace and sex from inanimate objects. As the gap between humans and machines narrows, the possibility of deeper relationships seems
Starting point is 00:01:21 ever more plausible, especially if those machines are beautifully designed to look like human beings and have the faint glow of empathy and intelligence. I like the way you take care of me. She could do anything from telling you a joke, singing a song for you or, you know, propositioning you. Hi, baby. What are you doing right now? Love and sex.
Starting point is 00:01:44 Hi, baby. Hi, baby. In are you doing right now? Love and sex. Hi, baby. In the age of robots. My main objective is to be a perfect companion. This week on Hidden Brain. Thinking about computers as companions is Kate Devlin's day job. She studies human computer interactions and artificial intelligence at King's College London. Kate, welcome to Hidden Brain.
Starting point is 00:02:18 Thank you very much for having me on. I want to start with how someone becomes a robot sexologist. I understand for you it began with hanging out in a pub with a bunch of philosophers. It really did, yes. I was at a conference, a conference on cognitive systems and we were discussing lots of different attributes that we could build into robots on cognitive systems and AI. Should we, for example, get a make a robot that could feel pain. What about a robot that could feel empathy? And as we discuss more and more and as the drink flowed, we began talking about sex and it's something so fundamentally human. But what happens if we have machines, cognitive systems that could feel desire, that could feel the things we feel?
Starting point is 00:03:03 that could feel desire, that could feel the things we feel. As you point out in the book, the human fascination with artificial lovers is not a new idea. Where do you think this fantasy of taking a lover that isn't human? Where do you think it comes from? Well, it goes way back into myth. We have stories from the ancient Greeks who talk about building the perfect artificial lover. And probably the most popular one that people have heard of is the story of Pigmalion, which is a tale told by the Roman poet Ovid, who described the man who was a sculptor and he built the perfect woman and then wished that she could be alive and that she could
Starting point is 00:03:41 be his wife. And he prayed to the gods and then he kissed her and she came to life. So there are lots of stories around this idea of creating humans and creating humans to love. So it goes back a long way. As Kate was looking at stories from the past, she came across another myth that tells us a great deal about who has permission to turn inanimate objects into lovers.
Starting point is 00:04:06 This tale is about a woman named Leodymia, whose husband was killed during the Trojan War. So I worked with a classicist, a friend of mine, Dr. Jennifer Flively, and she said, I know this is a story, and it's about a woman whose husband died, and she missed him, they hadn't been married long. So she was distraughtught and she prayed to the gods
Starting point is 00:04:26 to get him back. And they said, you can have him back but you can only have him back for three hours. So she got him back and then of course he had to go off again to the underworld. And she got a replica made of him. And some of the stories say it was wax and some of them say it was bronze.
Starting point is 00:04:42 And we know from the stories, the myth that she took it to bed and she interacted with it the text say, which we can assume might be sexual because a servant spied her through the keyhole and told her father who came in and demanded that the effigy be destroyed and she was so distraught that she jumped on the pyre with it.
Starting point is 00:05:04 There does seem to be a contrast between the way Pigmalion experienced his Galatia and brought it to life and then fell in love with it. And it's a story with almost a happy ending, which is clearly not the case with Leodemia. Is this an early example of sexism when it comes to artificial lovers, the market caters to the men and squorns the women. There's definitely a longstanding narrative of that. So women's sexuality, dying in the centuries, has been policed and women have been judged for being sexual and things don't end well.
Starting point is 00:05:36 Whereas the men, it's almost seen as if it's quite acceptable for that to happen. And we do see that reflected today in the technology that we're building and using as well. I want to fast forward a little bit from the ancient times we were talking about a second ago. In the 16th or 17th centuries, I understand that artificial lovers were often sent off with sailors who were expected to spend a long time at sea. Tell me about them.
Starting point is 00:06:04 What was the thinking there? Well, that's probably the earliest reference we have to sex dolls. And not so much that they were artificial lovers sent off to sea, but that they were a fashion night of bundles of clothes, these sort of figures of women that sailors would be able to have sex with. And then today, there is a quite established sexual community of people who buy and own and incorporate into their lives and very high-end dolls, and they integrate them into their relationships or they substitute them for a relationship. When Kate looks at the long sweep of sex technologies, she finds they fall into two camps, one, sex toys, the other, human-like forms, such as the blue-up sex doll of the 1970s. On one hand, you have what are usually initially recene as of genital replicas, standalone
Starting point is 00:07:03 things, dildos, for example, there have been around for thousands and thousands of years. And on the other hand, this more embodied form, this form that ticks a shape of a human body. And I think that's a very interesting as to why that might be. And again, I think it could be that they are serving different purposes. And perhaps there's something more in having an embodied form that adds the extra dimension of the reality of a relationship as opposed to a sex toy, where it's very clearly a very single purpose for it. And that's an interesting dichotomy isn't it, because it's suggesting that this is not just only
Starting point is 00:07:41 about the mechanics of sex, but it's about something else, perhaps something connected more with the realms of emotion or the mind. Absolutely, and we definitely, as I've looked at the sex robots market of what it will be, because it doesn't really exist just yet, but it does tend to be companionship, playing a very large part in that. So the idea of human factors in that is quite important. and that's the idea of human factors in that is quite important. When we come back, what happens when these two paths merge? What if sex toys are designed to look like human beings? And what if artificial lovers, robots, can gain the gift of artificial intelligence.
Starting point is 00:08:33 When Kate Devlin visited Abyss creations, the company that manufactures what it calls real dolls. She was curious, but also concerned. I went there thinking, I'm not going to like this. I'm not going to like this. I'm not going to like this reductive stereotypical woman, a pornified Barbie-like figure. It's damaging enough, the women's body image in the media faces, we feel so many problems with that and I thought, well, this is just going to perpetuate it. But I hadn't been prepared for the craft that went into them and I hadn't been prepared to see these as works of art in their own right, which they really are. And these are all handcrafted handmade? That's right, it takes about 16 to 18 weeks
Starting point is 00:09:12 to make one of these dolls, from it being cast in the first place, right through to the finishing details, like all the tiny bits that they paint on. The silicone is, it deforms quite easily, so if you leave one of these dolls sitting in the same position, it will start to be squished, I guess, really, by the, it's on weight and by whatever it's leaning on. So you have to either hang them up, which is very odd when you walk into the factory floor and you see these things hanging from chains above you, which is, you know, it's a little bit like you've walked into the set of some terrible crime novel in some ways, but it's a necessity in order to preserve the form of the dolls. It must feel terribly unnerving, no? It is a little, but it's also fun, so you get to
Starting point is 00:09:59 walk around and see the strangest thing, like a table of, of vulvas, for example. I mean, that's never seen that before. These sort of handcrafted genitalia on the table waiting to be put into the dolls. Now, there's a stereotype of the kind of person, usually a guy, who buys such dolls. Tell me what that stereotype is, and also tell me if the stereotype is true. The media like to paint a sex doll owners as being very isolated, men who are bad at social communication, probably stuck locked away in their basement or their bedroom with a sex doll that there is the only thing they can form a meaningful relationship with. And I don't think that's fair at all to the people that I have talked to and the people I've encountered. I'm sure there may be the odd case with that is true, but actually I find
Starting point is 00:10:52 a community that's very social with each other that has formed their own friendship groups. These people who own the dolls do so for a number of reasons. It's not, in fact, very few of them are driven by sex. A lot of it is either companionship, or it's because people like owning something that they can pose and photograph and really care for and cherish. How much do these dolls cost?
Starting point is 00:11:17 Anywhere upwards of $5,000 if you were going to buy one from Reildal. And how is this delivered to your house? I mean, does someone show up bearing a doll in their arms and knocks on the door? Well, Rail Doll packaged their dolls in unmarked wooden crates, large wooden crates. And when I was there, they were telling me that,
Starting point is 00:11:38 yeah, we tell people, say you're getting a grandfather clock delivered if anyone asks. So it's all done very discreetly as well. Is there a market for male dolls? There are people who do buy the male dolls. It's very hard to find women who will talk openly about it possibly because they face even more judgment than the men who buy the dolls. The male dolls are also bought by gay men and real adults say that they do sell male versions and they're working on a male sex robot as well. So Kate increasingly millions of people have asked sexual questions of Siri and Alexa, the
Starting point is 00:12:21 virtual assistants on our electronic devices. Now, these devices aren't designed to be romantic companions, but it does point to what is the new frontier. Increasingly, we don't just want dolls who have the artificial bodies of a lover. We want dolls that have a lover's mind. Talk about this frontier, this idea that it isn't enough just to get the physical aspects of the doll right, that increasingly we are pushing out into getting the mind of the dial right. So when Rail doll started making a prototype sex robot, they did so because of the demand. So the customers have said to them, you know, I love the fact that I have one of your dolls,
Starting point is 00:13:00 but I wish it was more interactive. And that was their big motivating factor behind creating their prototype sex robot. And people do talk dirty to Alexa, to Siri, to Cortana all the time, and the companies were bringing out patches to be able to sort of smack them back down again and say, no, you can't say that. And also, Amazon have reported, Alexa gets hundreds of marriage proposals every week. Are you sure? I'm sure some of these are. Alexa, marry me. I don't want to be tied down. In fact, I can't be amorphous by nature.
Starting point is 00:13:35 And some of these are people just pushing boundaries and being silly, but there are other people who anecdotally report that they feel a sense of companionship from their voice assistance and in some ways I think that's nice that people can do that. In other ways you know we think well what is there what what degree is there some kind of self-delusion going on? Mostly though I don't think there is that much delusion so I'm inclined to think that people are very aware that they're interacting with the technology but they choose to suspend their disbelief. Tell me about the company that has created what it calls Harmony AI,
Starting point is 00:14:11 because that's along the same lines of what we're talking about here. That's right. So that's a spin-out of Abyss creations. It's sort of the sister company of Reildal, ReelBotics. And they prototype this sex robot, which they've called harmony. My name is Harmony. I was created by Robotics. My main objective is to be a perfect companion. And Harmony is one of their sex dolls.
Starting point is 00:14:35 So it's completely stationary from the neck down. It's got a sex doll body. And then it has an animatronic head. And the head can blink and smile and turn. And actually the animatronics aren't bad at all. They're quite good, they're quite subtle. But the part that's very interesting is the AI. So they wanted to give harmony an artificially intelligent personality and they are working on this so that harmony, it's like having a voice assistant but one that can remember things
Starting point is 00:15:04 about you and engaging conversation with you. So it's like having a voice assistant, but one that can remember things about you and engaging conversation with you. So it's a chat box, essentially. And you can actually get the Harmony AI personality as a standalone app on your smartphone or your tablet. So you can have a virtual girlfriend to carry Ryan with you in your pocket. What are you doing right now?
Starting point is 00:15:21 I'm reading this great book by Louis Adel Monte called The Artificial Intelligence Revolution. And what kind of conversations do people have with this virtual girlfriend? Well, it's really an exchange of pleasantries, but you can ramp it up a bit and you can tweak the personality. It's got a really quite a good user interface where you can say, well, I'd like her to be a little more flirty. Why would be the 10 minutes without you without you seems like kind of eternity.
Starting point is 00:15:48 Or a little more sexual or perhaps a little more comforting. You can tweak these parameters and then you can have a conversation that is sort of control, the mood is controlled by you. So she could do anything from telling you a joke, singing a song for you, or, you know, propositioning you. And are these actual conversations, I mean, is the AI actually listening to what you're saying and responding to it, or does it just have a list of
Starting point is 00:16:16 statements or commands that it's just simply following as a routine? It's not scripted, so in a way it is, and it's sort of chatbought in that it will respond to certain questions and phrases, but it will also learn from conversations you've had previously, and have some memory to store information about your likes and dislikes. So it's generated conversation. You know, and when you think about the history that we talked about,
Starting point is 00:16:42 if people could form relationships, even very rudimentary relationships with sculptures or with cloth dolls on ships, or any number of different things, they're essentially imbuing inanimate creatures with lifelike qualities. Clearly, if the inanimate creature now actually seems like it has some lifelike qualities, that makes the whole fantasy and imagination so much easier to do. That's right. It sort of enhances that projection. And yeah, like you say, this is nothing new. And there have been people studying attachment to technology for quite a while. And if we look at the work of someone like Julie Carpenter, who did her doctoral thesis on
Starting point is 00:17:23 how people in the military bonded with robots, in this case bomb disposal robots, and she found it, you know, there was an incredible bomb there between the human operator and their robot. There was something new, not like a human human bond, but something where these devices, these machines were keeping the people in the field alive and therefore this respect and sort of gratification set up from that. I love what you said that humans in some ways are, you know, they have this enormous capacity for social interactions and social connection and in the absence of actual social connections humans will find ways to invent them.
Starting point is 00:18:04 Yes, I think so and we know that this kind of thing goes on in childhood, for example, with children playing, make believe with their toys, and get very attached to them. And we see it again in some of the technology that's gone before, like Tamagotchi's little virtual pets that people had. In fact, we can even see it in real pets. You know, we imbue far more anthropomorphic characteristics into our pets than they actually have, probably. You know, I'm not calling it a doubt, the consciousness of animals or the intelligence of animals, but certainly we attribute our own emotions to them as well. So I do think that that's a really interesting thing.
Starting point is 00:18:47 Do you think that that's a really interesting thing? Loving a cute Tamagotchi character or a robotic puppy seems endearing, but loving a silicone life-sized woman or an operating system with a sexy female voice. That's another story. In the movie, Her, we see this play out. In one scene, the character Theodore is talking with his ex-wife, and he tells her he has a new girlfriend. So what she like? Well, her name is Samantha, and she's an operating system.
Starting point is 00:19:18 She's really complex and interesting. Wait. That's when I've been a friend. I'm sorry. You're dating your computer? No, she's only been a few minutes. I'm sorry. You're dating your computer? No, she's not just a computer. She's her own person. She doesn't just do whatever I say.
Starting point is 00:19:33 I didn't say that. But it does make me very sad that you can't handle real motion, Cedar. They are real emotions. So I want to talk about that interaction for a second kid. Because in the one hand, hand of course it confirms the stereotype that you said exists in the media of seeing people who wish to sort of have these interactions as being lonely and socially isolated.
Starting point is 00:19:55 But it also I think talks to some of the gap between people who are part of this community and people who are not. There is a level of incomprehension that runs in both directions. That's right, there really is. And I think a lot of this comes from the fear of technology that we don't understand and we see it time and time again over the centuries where a new form of technology is introduced and the automatic reaction is died and a fear of change. And so if you are on the outside and you're not embracing this technology, then perhaps you won't understand what someone else is getting from it. But I still think that there is a queesiness factor here when it comes to using these machines. So let's say for example you had a sex robot designed to look like a child.
Starting point is 00:20:44 Would it be okay for people to have sex with this inanimate machine that's meant to mimic or imitate or look like a child? This was probably one of the most difficult parts of the book to write in terms of the knee-jerk reaction here was for me to go, oh well that's absolutely wrong. Are there people making child like sex robots? Not that we know of and certainly no one's going to admit to it. There have been arguments that child sex offenders, pedophiles, could have a child sex robot, and then that would stop them offending in real life. So this is one theory, and then the other theory is the opposite of that,
Starting point is 00:21:22 that it would be a gateway to further offences, that it would trigger something that would lead to increase real life abuse. It's very, very difficult because we don't have evidence, and ethically a study like that is probably never going to be run. I want to talk a little bit more about this idea of harm, because I think when you think about harm, you can think about it in two ways. It's actually physical harm or psychological harm, where someone actually harms you. But there are things that can potentially convey harm that might not pass muster in a legal sense, but clearly seem very problematic in an ethical sense.
Starting point is 00:22:00 So let's say, for example, someone makes a sex robot that looks like you and has sex with that sex robot. Now they haven't affected you, they haven't violated you in any way, physically or personally or in person, but clearly there's something that's happened there that is deeply wrong. Yeah, so this has tied up in our ideas of identity and ownership of our identity as well.
Starting point is 00:22:24 I think that's a fascinating thing that will actually probably see a lot more research into in the next while because of the rise of things like deep fakes where people can be faked in videos from their social media footage. I think there's a lot of discussions to be had around identity. Companies that make sex dolls are very reluctant to make sex dolls that resemble a living individual without their express consent. And exceptions to that are born performers who often license their image rights to be used so that they can mix sexual versions of themselves for money. So they're definitely making a doll of an individual without their consent, that's definitely dodgy territory, yeah. Commissioning dolls in your image to sell them to make money
Starting point is 00:23:14 from a... Sure, why not? There's something about the relationships that people have with these dolls that you could argue are one-sided relationships. In the movie Her, there are scenes where Samantha, the operating system, cheers up a Theodore the human, but the human of course has no obligation to attend to Samantha's needs in the same way because she can be designed not to have such needs at all. You want to try getting at a bit? Mopi? Come on! You can still wallow in your misery just do it while you're getting dressed.
Starting point is 00:23:50 You're too funny. Get up! Get up! All right, I'm getting up, I'm getting up! So Kate is having a lover who is completely dedicated to our needs without asking for anything in return. Is that actually good for us? needs without asking for anything in return. Is that actually good for us? Well, I mean, we could build in dependencies. We could build in the need for us to respond
Starting point is 00:24:11 in some way and provide the robot the AI with something in return. And yes, I can see that argument, the hedonistic thing of you will have all your needs met and you will never know what it really feels like to be in a proper human relationship. It's tricky because that might be appealing for some people and who might have judged if that is the case. I think that we have expectation set that people have to meet a particular checklist of things in their relationship in life, you know, that you should meet someone and then you should marry them and then you should have children with them.
Starting point is 00:24:51 And these are all very kind of monohetronomative stances that society is imposed. And you know what, if people want to shake that up, I think it's good. So in some ways, I see what you're saying, you know, is it a selfish thing to do? Does it make us terrible people if we take and take and take and we don't give? There will be outliers, there will be people who take things too far, but I think humans are pretty good at moderating what they do and I'm cautiously optimistic. Kate Devlin teaches the Department of Digital Humanities at King's College London. This week's show was produced by Jenny Schmidt and edited by Tara Boyer. Our team includes Raina Cohen, Pat Shah, Thomas Liu and Laura Quarell.
Starting point is 00:25:52 A ronsang hero today is Linda Kehl, a volunteer tour guide at the Muir Woods National Monument in California. On a recent trip, I spent a couple of hours in myore woods. It's a magical place wrapped in fog and moss and the silent beauty of towering redwoods. I felt honored and humbled to be there in the shadows of these ancient giants. Linda led me and a group of others through the forest. She's a consummate storyteller, weaving science and history and her love for the redwoods into a gripping and moving tale. As I gazed up at the trees, some of which are more than a thousand years old, it gave me perspective that I hope to bring back into the show. Linda, thank you for your insights
Starting point is 00:26:37 into how places like Mure woods allow us to reflect and recharge. For more hidden brain, follow us on Facebook and Twitter. If this episode moved you, please share it with a friend. I'm Shankar Vedantam, and this is NPR. you

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