Artificial intelligence experts believe that many products being sold as they use this technology are devices that only respond to voice commands, but are not yet artificially intelligent because they can not learn anything about the user.
One of the earliest attempts to use AI to upgrade a sex toy, the HUM was a prototype vibrator introduced in 2014 that promised to adjust its vibration patterns based on body movements, all with the help of sensors that would dispense with the need to press the button. HUM has never left the paper, but the expectation around the product was a taste of the desire for an erotic experience without effort.
Main challenges
Perhaps one of the great difficulties of working on advanced programming to perfect sex toys is specifically learning the machine, and how to get data from an unforgettable sexual experience to teach an AI device about sex.
On sale in the market, Lioness is one of the products that most closely approximates the idea of an intelligent vibrator. Funded via Indiegogo, it works with the help of sensors that map temperature and body movements and captures contractions of the pelvic muscles so the user understands how his or her body works. These data are still cross-referenced with information from the menstrual cycle so that the device can finally suggest positions and frequencies that could lead to orgasm.
The complexity of the functioning of our organism is still an issue to be overcome by AI devices, and as body and mind are not always in tune when it comes to sex, understanding stimulus patterns to teach them to a machine can be more complicated than you can imagine. And while smart sex toys are still a promise, self-knowledge continues to be more efficient than the most advanced of technologies.
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