Alexa, Tell Me A Story
BBC Earth|May - June 2021
Dr Lara Martin wants to teach artificial intelligence how to tell a tale and tell it well. She reveals to Amy Barrett why we need to train machines how to be storytellers and what Dungeons & Dragons has to do with it all….
Amy Barrett
Alexa, Tell Me A Story

WHY DO WE WANT TO TEACH MACHINES HOW TO TELL STORIES?

People have been telling stories since before we could write; we’re natural storytellers. So if machines were able to tell and understand stories as well, we’d be able to communicate with them more naturally. We’re starting to adopt conversational personal assistants – like Alexa or Siri – as a society, but these computers still don’t actually know how to converse. The most effective and personal way people have of conversing is by telling stories.

SO TEACHING AN AI TO TELL STORIES COULD IMPROVE OUR LIVES AND TECHNOLOGY?

A lot of people don’t realise how much nearly everything we say is a story, or could be framed as a story. I like imagining that you could just talk to your personal assistant, and it would work with you to figure something out. Like maybe you’re planning a birthday party for your kid, and you tell it “Hey, I’m planning a party for Gina’s 10th birthday. Can you help me?” and it can create a story about this party: “Every good party starts with cake. You could get a cake at the local grocery store, and then while you’re there buy some balloons. Once you’ve set up the decorations...” and so on. The assistant could collaborate with you to come up with this party narrative until you’re happy with it. I think there’s a lot of cool potential for human-AI collaboration here.

WHERE DO YOU START? AND WHAT ARE THE LAYERS YOU NEED TO BUILD TO TEACH AN AI ABOUT TELLING STORIES?

This story is from the May - June 2021 edition of BBC Earth.

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This story is from the May - June 2021 edition of BBC Earth.

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