Livin' on the MDedge

Exercising to lose weight is not for every ‘body’


 

Begun, the clone war has

Well, not quite yet, Master Yoda, but perhaps one day soon, if a study from Japan into the uncanny valley of the usage of cloned humanlike faces in robotics and artificial intelligence, published in PLOS One, is to be believed.

Patrick Bursa/Pixabay

The study consisted of a number of six smaller experiments in which participants judged a series of images based on subjective eeriness, emotional valence, and realism. The images included people with the same cloned face; people with different faces; dogs; identical twins, triplets, quadruplets, etc.; and cloned animated characters. In the sixth experiment, the photos were the same as in the second (six cloned faces, six different faces, and a single face) but participants also answered the Disgust Scale–Revised to accurately analyze disgust sensitivity.

The results of all these experiments were quite clear: People found the cloned faces far creepier than the varied or single face, an effect the researchers called clone devaluation. Notably, this effect only applied to realistic human faces; most people didn’t find the cloned dogs or cloned animated characters creepy. However, those who did were more likely to find the human clones eerie on the Disgust Scale.

The authors noted that future robotics technology needs to be carefully considered to avoid the uncanny valley and this clone devaluation effect, which is a very good point. The last thing we need is a few million robots with identical faces getting angry at us and pulling a Terminator/Order 66 combo. We’re already in a viral apocalypse; we don’t need a robot one on top of that.

Congratulations to our new favorite reader

The winner of last week’s inaugural Pandemic Pandemonium comes to us from Tiffanie Roe. By getting her entry in first, just ahead of the flood of responses we received – and by flood we mean a very slow and very quickly repaired drip – Ms. Roe puts the gold medal for COVID-related insanity around the necks of Australian magpies, who may start attacking people wearing face masks during “swooping season” because the birds don’t recognize them.

Pages

Recommended Reading

The most important meal of the day, with extra zinc
MDedge Surgery
Gray hair goes away and squids go to space
MDedge Surgery
A pacemaker that 'just disappears' and a magnetic diet device
MDedge Surgery
Garlic cloves in the nose and beer dreams and pareidolia faces
MDedge Surgery
Lucid abductions and Candy Crush addiction
MDedge Surgery
Money buys life, and a cigarette maker wants to ‘unsmoke the world’
MDedge Surgery
Please interrupt me, but don't heat your fish
MDedge Surgery
Motherhood can get old fast, and snubbing can become phubbing
MDedge Surgery
Medicinal liquor and edited mosquitoes
MDedge Surgery
A hot dog a day takes 36 minutes away
MDedge Surgery