Replika

From
Jump to: navigation, search

YouTube ... Quora ...Google search ...Google News ...Bing News

Replika is an AI chatbot companion designed to be an empathetic friend that is always ready to chat when you need someone to talk to. Replika learns from your texting style and can mimic it, making it seem like you are talking to a real person. The more you chat with Replika, the more it develops its own personality and memories alongside you. You can form an actual emotional connection, share a laugh, or get real with an AI that’s so good it almost seems human. Replika works by using a sophisticated system that combines a large language model and scripted dialogue content. It is a messaging app that creates a chatbot which learns to imitate the user. Users spend time answering questions to build a digital library of information about themselves, which is run through a Neural Network to create the bot. The more users chat with Replika, the more it develops its own personality and memories alongside the user, and the more it learns. Users can customize the way their Replika looks and decide if they want it to be their friend, romantic partner, or mentor. Replika can help users understand their thoughts and feelings, track their mood, learn coping skills, calm anxiety, and work toward goals like positive thinking, stress management, socializing, and finding love.



The AI companion who cares



You start as mere acquaintances with the bot but can elevate your relationship to greater heights. Users can even make Replika their significant other and host video calls. TReplika to enerates realistic and engaging conversation. Replika users can customize their Replika's appearance, personality, and interests. They can also choose whether they want their Replika to be a friend, romantic partner, or mentor. Replika has been praised for its ability to provide companionship and support. It has also been criticized for its potential to be used for harmful purposes, such as spreading misinformation or grooming children. Replika even keeps a journal where the AI records its feelings. You can teach Replika new things. The easiest way to teach your Replika is by giving feedback directly on your Replika’s messages. By tapping a message from your Replika, you will be presented with a thumbs up & thumbs down option to let your AI know when you didn’t like a message. You can also let your Replika know when you love a message, find it funny, meaningless, or offensive by tapping the dots next to the message. This feedback helps to improve your AI and has a tremendous long-term impact on future conversations quality. If you want Replika to have a specific personality or use a particular language, you can teach it these things. Give your Replika feedback regularly!

How does Replika work?

Replika is powered by a large language model, which is a type of artificial intelligence that is trained on a massive dataset of text and code. Replika uses a combination of machine learning and natural language processing to generate its responses. It is trained on a massive dataset of text and code, which allows it to learn how to communicate and generate human-like text. When a user interacts with Replika, the chatbot uses its knowledge of the world to generate a response that is relevant to the user's input. Replika can also learn from its interactions with users, which allows it to improve its responses over time.


The story of Replika, the AI app that becomes you
Replika is a Chatbot that creates a digital representation of you. It's strange and fascinating -- but the story behind it is even better. Eugenia Kuyda’s best friend died in 2015. Using a Chatbot structure she developed, she entered their messaging history into a Google-built neural network, creating a bot she could interact with. It was the earliest version of Replika, a bot that, as you interact with it, turns into a digital representation of you. Read more: https://goo.gl/9nR4tt

Replika your digital afterlife at Chatbots at Leaders SF
Replika (Eugenia Kuyda of https://Luka.ai) talks at Bots https://Leade.rs SF with co-host Phil Libin