Why We're Obsessed With Feminized A.I.

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An expert on voice recognition and speech technologies responds to Ysabelle Cheung's "Galatea." When Joseph Faber invented the Euphonia, a mid-19th century analog voice synthesizer, people weren't impressed. They found Faber's invention to be a strange device with little to no purpose. In an attempt to create a machine that could mimic human speech, Faber was physically tethered to his invention, manipulating its bellows, gears, and hardware to produce human-like utterances--from short speeches to ghostly renditions of "God Save the Queen"--with a flat affect. One version of the machine was designed with a feminine face attached to its bellows, hair in ringlets and fair, smooth-looking skin.

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