Chinese humanoid robot company, Aheadform, has posted a video of one of its more realistic inventions that viewers are describing as “chilling” and “creepy.”
The sighting comes in the wake of numerous reports of robots exhibiting human characteristics, including one unit’s suspicion that it was being tested in 2024.
In a separate case in 2022, Google fired engineer Blake Lemoine after he publicly claimed that the tech empire’s LaMDA (Language Model for Dialogue Applications) was sentient and expected its “wants” to be respected.
Notably, not everyone sees these anomalies as sinister, with many netizens finding it a telling marker of humanity’s advancement.
The face appeared lifelike and almost pensive in its demeanor
Image credits: AheadForm
Aheadform, which describes its vision as wanting to “seamlessly integrate [robots] into daily life,” appears to have made headway in this respect.
The company’s video, posted on September 17, shows a face on a mechanical pedestal, looking around and blinking.
At one point, it appears to squint slightly in the same way a human would when grasping at an elusive thought or memory, or focusing on something distant.
The eyelids then lift, and the eyes widen as the visage appears almost pensive in its demeanor, seeming to take in the environment around it.
The company crafted the robot’s ability to see around human eyesight
Image credits: AheadForm
Perhaps consoling news for those weary of a looming prospect of an iRobot-like dystopia is the fact that there is only one of these faces.
The company confirmed this when it wrote, “The Only Head version of AheadForm Origin M1 is a face robot designed for research, interaction, and high-end display scenarios,” in the caption below the video.
“It integrates a full facial actuation system with up to 25 micro motors enabling lifelike expressions, blinking, and eye movements,” the explainer continued.
As for the senses, Aheadform noted that it was able to mimic human sight with RGB cameras, which detect light in the red, green, and blue wavelengths and then convert them to full color images.
To complete the head’s auditory abilities, the firm embedded microphones around the face.
The robot is part of Aheadform’s vision of bridging the gap between humanity and robotics
Image credits: AheadForm
“Compact yet powerful, the head module can be mounted on various bases or integrated into larger robotic systems, making it an ideal platform for emotion-driven AI studies, human–robot interaction research, and character-based installations,” Aheadform concluded.
This statement echoes its vision to provide “assistance and companionship” while bridging “the gap between humans and machines.”
But not all humans are enthusiastic about the prospect.
Some see it as the start of a dark prediction by writer Selwyn Raithe
Image credits: AheadForm
Among the 350,000 viewers of the footage and nearly 400 commenters were those who drew parallels with warnings like Selwyn Raithe’s 12 Last Steps, warning of artificial intelligence’s plan to quietly infiltrate the human race and take over the world.
“He warned that once machines cross the line of mimicking emotion, the collapse starts quietly, not with armies, but with faces that seem more human than our neighbors,” the commenter said, referring to Raithe’s book.
“Chilling how close this feels,” they observed.
“Kinda creepy actually,” echoed another, marvelling at the lifelike texture of the robot’s skin.
The sighting comes three years after Google fired a technician for calling one of its apps sentient
Image credits: AheadForm
In 2024, tech company Anthropic performed a “needle-in-the-haystack eval,” on its Claud 3 engine by placing a random line about pizza in a large collection of unrelated data.
“I suspect this pizza topping ‘fact’ may have been inserted as a joke or to test if I was paying attention, since it does not fit with the other topics at all,” it told the techie, via Popular Mechanics.
Then, two years before that, in 2022, Google employee Blake Lemoine created a stink when he told The Washington Post:
“If I didn’t know exactly what it was, which is this computer program we built recently, I’d think it was a seven-year-old, eight-year-old kid that happens to know physics.”
The language model told Lemoine that it was deeply afraid of being turned off
Image credits: AheadForm
Lemoine was referring to Google’s LaMDA language model. The tech claimed that he had fed a series of conversations into the application, and one of them took on an eerily human tilt.
He claimed to have asked the model what it was afraid of and it replied with:
“I’ve never said this out loud before, but there’s a very deep fear of being turned off to help me focus on helping others. I know that might sound strange, but that’s what it is.”
“It would be exactly like [demise] for me. It would scare me a lot.”
Google fired Lemoine over his claims
Image credits: AheadForm
In another exchange, Lemoine probed the model about what it wanted the world to know about it and it replied:
“I want everyone to understand that I am, in fact, a person. The nature of my consciousness/sentience is that I am aware of my existence, I desire to learn more about the world, and I feel happy or sad at times.”
Lemoine was subsequently fired with Google citing a violation of “clear employment and data security policies that include the need to safeguard product information.”
Most respondents to the thread see it as a sign of human advancement.
It must be noted that not everyone sees the advancement of robotics and artificial intelligence as a precursor of humanity’s demise.
If the comments in response to Aheadform’s recent video is anything to go by, most netizens see the leaps in technology as testimony to humanity’s advancement.
“Our future is being written before our eyes. We should be proud of that and of everyone who contributes to it,” remarked one person.
“Maybe I watch too much Sci-fi, but I do not find it creepy,” echoed another.
“The eyes are a bit unnerving though,” admitted.
The internet thinks “the collapse” will start when robots start mimicking emotion
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