Intel Develops Controversial AI to Detect Emotional States of Students

https://www.tomshardware.com/news/intel-students-ai-controversy

Kid Computer

(Image credit: Shutterstock)

An Intel-developed software solution aims to apply the power of artificial intelligence to the faces and body language of digital students. According to Protocol, the solution is being distributed as part of the “Class” software product and aims to aid in teachers’ education techniques by allowing them to see the AI-inferred mental states (such as boredom, distraction, or confusion) of each student. Intel aims to expand the program into broader markets eventually. However, the technology has been met with pushbacks that bring debates on AI, science, ethics and privacy to the forefront.

The AI-based feature, which was developed in partnership with Classroom Technologies, is integrated with Zoom via the former’s “Class” software product. It can be used to classify students’ body language and facial expressions whenever digital classes are held through the videoconferencing application. Citing teachers’ own experiences following remote lessons taken during the COVID-19 pandemic, Michael Chasen, co-founder and CEO of Classroom Technologies, hopes its software gives teachers additional insights, ultimately bettering remote learning experiences.

The software makes use of students’ video streams, which it feeds into the AI engine alongside contextual, real-time information that allows it to classify students’ understanding of the subject matter. Sinem Aslan, a research scientist at Intel who helped develop the technology, says that the main objective is to improve one-on-one teaching sessions by allowing the teacher to react in real-time to each student’s state of mind (nudging them in whatever direction is deemed necessary).

But while Intel and Classroom Technologies’ aim may be well-intentioned, the basic scientific premise behind the AI solution – that body language and other external signals can be accurately used to infer a person’s mental state – is far from being a closed debate.

For one, research has shown the dangers of labeling: the act of fitting information – sometimes even shoehorning it – into easy to perceive (but ultimately and frequently too simplistic) categories.

We don’t yet fully understand the external dimensions through which people express their internal states. For example, the average human being expresses themselves through dozens (some say even hundreds) of micro expressions (dilating pupils, for instance), macro expressions (smiling or frowning), bodily gestures, or physiological signals (such as perspiration, increased heart rate, and so on). 

It’s interesting to ponder the AI technology’s model – and its accuracy – when the scientific community itself hasn’t been able to reach a definite conclusion on translating external action toward internal states. Building houses on quicksand rarely works out.

Another noteworthy and potential caveat for the AI engine is that expressing emotions also vary between cultures. While most cultures would equate smiling with an expression of internal happiness, Russian culture, for instance, reserves smiles for close friends and family – being overly smiley in the wrong context is construed as a lack of intelligence or honesty. Expand this towards the myriad of cultures, ethnicities, and individual variations, and you can imagine the implications of these personal and cultural “quirks” on the AI model’s accuracy.

According to Nese Alyuz Civitci, a machine-learning researcher at Intel, the company’s model was built with the insight and expertise of a team of psychologists, who analyzed the ground truth data captured in real-life classes using laptops with 3D cameras. The team of psychologists then proceeded to examine the videos, labeling the emotions they detected throughout the feeds. For the data to be valid and integrated into the model, at least two out of three psychologists had to agree on how to label it. 

Intel’s Civitci himself found it exceedingly hard to identify the subtle physical differences between possible labels. Interestingly, Aslan says Intel’s emotion-analysis AI wasn’t assessed on whether it accurately reflected students’ actual emotions, but rather on its results being instrumental or trustable by teachers.

There are endless questions that can be posed regarding AI systems, their training data (which has severe consequences, for instance, on facial recognition tech used by law enforcement) and whether its results can be trusted. Systems such as these can either prove beneficial, leading teachers to ask the right question, at the right time, to a currently troubled student. But it can also be detrimental to student performance, well-being, and even their academic success, depending on its accuracy and how teachers use it to inform their opinions on students.

Questions surrounding long-term analysis of students’ emotional states also arise – could a report from systems such as these be used by a company hiring students straight out of university, with labels such as “depressed” or “attentive” being thrown around? To what measure of this data should the affected individuals have access? And what about students’ emotional privacy – their capacity to keep their emotional states internalized? Are we comfortable with our emotions being labeled and accessible to anyone – especially if there’s someone in a position of power on the other side of the AI?

The line between surveillance and AI-driven, assistive technologies seems to be thinning, and the classroom is but one of the environments at stake. That brings an entirely new interpretation for wearing our hearts on our sleeves.

What bothers me is there are legal safeguards over what can be done with recording and using cameras on children, but no such safeguards on adults.   We are getting used to every aspect of public life being under the watch of cameras and those that can tap into them.  Plus many people have cameras in their homes, on their electronic devices, in their autos that all record or report on them.   Over the years since 9/11 we have given up any real idea of privacy, our lives are a fishbowl.   Even our TV’s report back what we watch, when we stop or pause.   Our homes have cameras that the police want access to (ring system) that neighbors can join to share their cameras with.   Now these face things on your computer.   Ask this question, will they have to ask you to use your camera, or will the bad actors simply use them anyway.   I run security programs to prevent access to my computer cameras and on my desktops when I am not using them I unplug them.  But what about new independent digital cameras and phone cameras?   Will you get notified when a company accesses them?  The microphones?   Do the terms of service you just ignore to get the app you want give them the right to spy on you?   I wish I could say the government will protect us but the government is one of the biggest abusers of the system.  After 9/11 the Patriot Act gave away most privacy rights of US citizens in favor of the feeling of being safe.  Do you feel safer now?  In some areas the public has to install cameras in their homes in case the police break in to protect the occupant that lives there.    WTF has happened to the independent freedom loving Americans?   Oh yes they are attacking school boards over mask policies and trying to stop people from reading books that have the true racist history or god forbid be about LGBTQ+.  

Trump utterly HUMILIATES himself at disastrous rally appearance

BREAKING: Trump just utterly HUMILIATED himself at his disastrous rally appearance.

Marjorie Taylor Greene caught LYING red handed IN COURT

BREAKING: Marjorie Taylor Greene just got caught LYING red handed IN COURT.

PERJURY TAYLOR GREENE

Let’s talk about defense companies, money, and Ukraine….

Michael Lewis on why U.S. COVID response was so…crappy. (My word)

This audio only but I watched the beginning with the CC on and I thought it followed very well during the intro that I had it on.  

Trolls make up fake stories of parents forcing kids to be trans to fuel moral panic

https://www.lgbtqnation.com/2022/04/trolls-make-fake-stories-parents-forcing-kids-trans-fuel-moral-panic/

 
 
An internet troll
Photo: Shutterstock

An internet forum where people pretending to be parents forcing their children to be transgender has gotten shut down after it was found to be full of fake stories.

As the U.S. plunges even deeper into a moral panic over children who are supposedly being forced to transition, some anti-transgender people are reacting to the fact that that never happens by making up stories about it and trying to pass them off as real.

Related: Why are Kentucky Republicans so afraid of a mediocre 12-year-old athlete?

“Anyone else have trouble convincing your teen kids to continue transitioning?” user “Funkyduffy” wrote on the subreddit r/TransParentTransKid. “My 15-year-old daughter (AMAB) has started refusing her estradiol so I’ve been crushing the pills and putting it in her cereal in the morning.”

Reddit is a largely anonymous internet platform where most users create unidentifiable handles and connections between users aren’t the focus, a contrast to social media platforms like Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter. This makes it easier and more accepted for people to create temporary profiles to say whatever they want on various forums called subreddits.

One such subreddit, r/TransParentTransKid, was started last August when some users decided to post fake stories to it to promote the negative stereotype that parents and schools are forcing kids to be transgender. In reality it is common for schools and parents to be obstacles to trans kids expressing their identities while it’s unheard of for schools and parents to impede cisgender kids the same way.

The user who called for the subreddit’s creation said that it would be “filled with stories about how our real/adoptive children magically learned they were also trans after finding out about their parents,” according to Reuters.

According to another subreddit, r/AgainstHateSubreddits, r/TransParentTransKid was shut down for violating Reddit’s rules because they were “engaged in promoting hatred of transgender people, as well as targeted harassment.”

But the stories still spread outside of Reddit to rightwingers who were all too willing to believe them.

“This is fucking child abuse and I’ll die on this Hill,” wrote libertarian author Justin O’Donnell on Twitter, posting a picture of Funkyduffy’s fake story. He got almost 46,000 likes for it.

 
Ian Miles Cheong – who has a history of posting misinformation about trans people online and even riling Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) up – shared the story with the words “Good parenting.”
 
 

The story comes as conservative politicians and activists are claiming that there is a massive effort by schools and parents to turn children transgender.

For example, Rep. Greene said in February that there are “these mothers that think [having a trans child] is like having a handbag. They need to have a boy, a girl, and a trans child like as if they’re some kind of accessory.”

Funkyduffy’s story may have been one that pushed her to believe that such parents exist.

“I have never – not once – heard of a child being forced to transition,” said the ACLU’s Gillian Branstetter. “The exception is intersex children who are frequently forced into surgeries, yet every effort to ban gender-affirming care exempts those surgeries.”

Beau Of The Fifth Column teaches class in Cincinnati

I knew Beau had defensive training from the way he talked, but this shows he had advanced level stuff.  I took Kempo and of course I had self defensive training in the Army, the nuclear plant, and the sheriff’s department I worked for.  This is stuff I practiced during our training classes.   I can tell you it works.  I knew a woman who was 5 foot 2 inches tall who using this stuff could walk a linebacker around the room and put him on his knees.   The wrist controls work as do elbow locks.  The rest I will let you figure out.  But in a desperate situation, you want to cripple someone so they cannot chase you, a direct hit to the knee cap.  They will go down and not walk right again.  Anyway you can watch the video it is really good information.  

‘Rich Guy Voter Fraud’: Meadows Was Registered To Vote In Three States At Once

Wow so blatant.  As I said the Republican’s are sure there is voter fraud because they are the ones doing it.  And in the case of a rich connected guy like Meadows they think they are owed it.  

“We found the voter fraud! It’s rich guy voter fraud by Mark Meadows, voter fraud ‘expert,’” says Mehdi Hasan on reporting that Meadows was registered to vote in three states at once.

Curious Number Of Russian Oligarchs Have Died Since Invasion Of Ukraine

Just so people really understand why / how Putin remains in office.