More than 40% of people want to form a "family" with physical dolls, but men prefer it than women
Last week, a report on smart physical dolls circulated on the Internet, which said that as many as 42% of people would choose to establish a "family" with smart physical dolls.
The foreign artificial intelligence company TiDio collected more than 1200 people in 3 episodes as the survey population, and found that 40% of them said they could "fall in love" with intelligent physical dolls, 35% said they were disgusted, and the rest kept a neutral wait-and-see attitude. Among the people who agree, men account for the vast majority, with more than 50% of those who agree being men, while only 33% of women.
However, this is likely to be a hypothetical situation where self conjecture prevails, because in fact only 39% of people believe that they will associate with technology products such as artificial intelligence or even form a family.
Robots are developing rapidly, and physical dolls belong to a branch of robot application. Dr. David Levy, founder of the International Robot Love and Sex Conference, said in an interview earlier that once physical dolls can talk and listen to words like human beings, "they" will have the right to love freely.
Dr Levy said: "Gamers have a feeling of love for their physical dolls, so I think there is great potential to let more people fall in love with 'sex' robots, but the technology is not yet fully mature."
In his interview, he also made a bold prediction, "I am very sure that by 2050, there will be" artificial people "who can have conversations as smooth as human conversations."
Of course, AI and robots are not only used in the field of adult toys. According to TiDio's survey, some people are deeply worried about the role of AI and automation in the economy. When asked about the jobs most likely to be replaced by AI, 63% of respondents said that cashiers would be replaced, followed by drivers (51%) and translators (42%).
At the same time, more than 60% of people said they would use autonomous AI cars in congested traffic environments. Gender differences in the perception of AI are reflected in the whole study. Men are twice as likely as women to trust AI, including allowing robots to operate on themselves or teach children to read in the future.
--Reprinted from the public account: Entity doll combat experience
--Reprinted from the public account: Entity doll combat experience