Scientists create AI chatbot which can predict death

Researchers said artificial intelligence developed to model written language can be utilized to predict events in people’s lives and can even estimate the time of death.

A research project from DTU, University of Copenhagen, ITU, and Northeastern University in the US shows that if you use large amounts of data about people’s lives and train so-called ‘transformer models’, which (like ChatGPT) are used to process language, they can systematically organize the data and predict what will happen in a person’s life.

Researchers create AI chatbot which can predict death. Photo Courtesy: Pixabay

“In a new scientific article, ‘Using sequences of life-events to predict human lives’, published in Nature Computational Science, researchers have analyzed health data and attachment to the labour market for 6 million Danes in a model dubbed life2vec,” read Technical University of Denmark website.

“After the model has been trained in an initial phase, i.e., learned the patterns in the data, it has been shown to outperform other advanced neural networks (see fact box) and predict outcomes such as personality and time of death with high accuracy,” read the website.

“We used the model to address the fundamental question: to what extent can we predict events in your future based on conditions and events in your past? Scientifically, what is exciting for us is not so much the prediction itself, but the aspects of data that enable the model to provide such precise answers,” Sune Lehmann, professor at DTU and first author of the article, said.

Predictions of time of death

The predictions from Life2vec are answers to general questions such as: ‘death within four years’?

When the researchers analyze the model’s responses, the results are consistent with existing findings within the social sciences; for example, all things being equal, individuals in a leadership position or with a high income are more likely to survive, while being male, skilled or having a mental diagnosis is associated with a higher risk of dying.

Life2vec encodes the data in a large system of vectors, a mathematical structure that organizes the different data.

The model decides where to place data on the time of birth, schooling, education, salary, housing and health.

“What’s exciting is to consider human life as a long sequence of events, similar to how a sentence in a language consists of a series of words. This is usually the type of task for which transformer models in AI are used, but in our experiments we use them to analyze what we call life sequences, i.e., events that have happened in human life,” says Sune Lehmann.

The researchers behind the article point out that ethical questions surround the life2vec model, such as protecting sensitive data, privacy, and the role of bias in data.

These challenges must be understood more deeply before the model can be used, for example, to assess an individual’s risk of contracting a disease or other preventable life events.

“The model opens up important positive and negative perspectives to discuss and address politically,” says Sune Lehmann.

“Similar technologies for predicting life events and human behaviour are already used today inside tech companies that, for example, track our behaviour on social networks, profile us extremely accurately, and use these profiles to predict our behaviour and influence us,”  Lehmann said.

“This discussion needs to be part of the democratic conversation so that we consider where technology is taking us and whether this is a development we want,” says Sune Lehmann.

According to the researchers, the next step would be to incorporate other types of information, such as text and images or information about our social connections.


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