AI Agents & the Future of Human Experience + Always On AI Wearables + Artificiality Updates for 2025

AI Agents & the Future of Human Experience + Always On AI Wearables + Artificiality Updates for 2025

Author: Helen and Dave Edwards January 17, 2025 Duration: 27:14

Science Briefing: What AI Agents Tell Us About the Future of Human Experience * What These Papers Highlight - AI agents are improving but far from capable of replacing human tasks. Even the best models fail at simple things humans find intuitive, like handling social interactions or navigating pop-ups. - One paper benchmarks agent performance in workplace-like tasks, showing just 24% success on even simple tasks. The other argues that agents alone aren’t enough—we need a broader system to make them useful. * Why This Matters - Human Compatibility: Agents don’t just need to complete tasks—they need to work in ways that humans trust and find relatable. - New Ecosystems: Instead of relying on better agents alone, we might need personalized digital “Sims” that act as go-betweens, understanding us and adapting to our preferences. - Humor in Failure: From renaming a coworker to "solve" a problem to endlessly struggling with pop-ups, these failures highlight how far AI still is from grasping human context. * What’s Interesting - Humans vs. Machines: AI performs better on coding than on “easier” tasks like scheduling or teamwork. Why? It’s great at structure, bad at messiness. - Sims as a Bridge: The idea of digital versions of ourselves (Sims) managing agents for us could change how we relate to technology, making it feel less like a tool and more like a collaborator. - Impact on Trust: The future of agents will hinge on whether they can align with human values, privacy, and quirks—not just perform better technically. *What’s Next for Agents - Can agents learn to navigate our complexity, like social norms or context-sensitive decisions? - Will ecosystems with Sims and Assistants make AI feel more human—and less robotic? - How will trust and personalization shape whether people actually adopt these systems? Product Briefing: Always On AI Wearables * What’s new: - New AI wearables launched at CES 2025 that continuously listen. From earbuds (HumanPods) to wristbands (Bee Pioneer) to stick-it-to-your-head pods (Omi), these cheap hardware devices are attempting to be your always-listening assistants. * Why This Matters - From Wake Words to Always-On: These devices listen passively—no activation required—requiring the user to opt-out by muting rather than opting in. - Privacy? Pfft: Not only are these devices small enough to hide and record without anyone knowing. The Omi only turns on a light when it is not recording. - Razor-Razorblade Model: With hardware prices below $100, these devices are priced to all for easy experimentation—the value is in the software subscription. * What’s Interesting - Mind-reading?: Omi claims to detect brain signals, allowing users to think their commands instead of speaking. - It’s About Apps: The app store is back as a business model. But are these startups ready for the challenge? - Memory Prosthetics: These devices record, transcribe, and summarize everything—generating to do lists and more. * The Human Experience - AI as a Second Self?: These devices don’t just assist; they remember, organize, and anticipate—how will that reshape how we interact with and recall our own experiences? - Can We Still Forget?: If everything in our lives is logged and searchable, do we lose the ability to let go? - Context Collapse: AI may summarize what it hears, but can it understand the complexity of human relationships, emotions, and social cues?


Hosted by Helen and Dave Edwards, Stay Human, from the Artificiality Institute is a conversation that lives in the messy, human space between our tools and our selves. Each episode digs into the subtle ways artificial intelligence is reshaping our daily decisions, our creative impulses, and even our sense of identity. This isn't a technical manual or a series of futuristic predictions; it's a grounded exploration of how we maintain our agency in a world increasingly mediated by algorithms. The podcast operates from a core belief: that our engagement with AI should be about more than just safety or efficiency-it needs to be meaningful and worthwhile. You'll hear discussions rooted in story-based research, where complex ideas about cognition and ethics are unpacked through relatable narratives and real-world examples. The goal is to provide a framework for thoughtful choice, helping each of us consciously design the relationship we want with the machines in our lives. Tuning in offers a chance to step back from the hype and consider how we can actively remain the authors of our own minds, preserving what makes us uniquely human even as the technology evolves. It's an essential listen for anyone curious about the personal and philosophical dimensions of our digital age.
Author: Language: en-us Episodes: 100

Stay Human, from the Artificiality Institute
Podcast Episodes
Chris Summerfield: These Strange New Minds [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 1:00:31
In this conversation, we explore machine intelligence and human understanding with Christopher Summerfield, Professor of Cognitive Neuroscience at Oxford and author of "These Strange New Minds: How AI Learned to Talk and…
Nina Beguš: Artificial Humanities [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 55:07
In this conversation, we explore the cultural foundations of artificial intelligence with Nina Beguš, Assistant Professor at UC Berkeley and author of "Artificial Humanities: A Fictional Perspective on Language in AI." N…
Blaise Agüera y Arcas: What Is Intelligence? [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 44:05
In this conversation, we explore the nature of intelligence and life itself with Blaise Agüera y Arcas, VP and Fellow at Google and head of the Paradigms of Intelligence Lab. Blaise discusses his ambitious new book "What…
Steven Sloman: The Cost of Conviction [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 52:46
In this conversation, we explore the psychology of conviction with Steve Sloman, Professor of Cognitive, Linguistic, and Psychological Sciences at Brown University and advisor to the Artificiality Institute. Returning to…
Ellie Pavlick: The AI Paradigm Shift [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 55:49
In this conversation, we explore the foundations of artificial intelligence with Ellie Pavlick, Assistant Professor of Computer Science at Brown University, a Research Scientist at Google Deepmind, and Director of ARIA,…
Helen & Dave Edwards: Becoming Synthetic [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 25:04
We enjoyed giving a virtual keynote for the Autonomous Summit on December 4, 2025, titled Becoming Synthetic: What AI Is Doing To Us, Not Just For Us. We talked about our research on how to maintain human agency & cognit…
Tess Posner: AI, Creativity, and Education [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 51:15
In this conversation recorded on the 1,000th day since ChatGPT's launch, we explore education, creativity, and transformation with Tess Posner, founding CEO of AI4ALL. For nearly a decade—long before the current AI surge…
Eric Schwitzgebel: The Weirdness of the World [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 50:16
In this conversation, we explore the philosophical art of embracing uncertainty with Eric Schwitzgebel, Professor of Philosophy at UC Riverside and author of "The Weirdness of the World." Eric's work celebrates what he c…
John Pasmore: Inclusive AI [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 34:31
In this conversation, we explore the challenges of building more inclusive AI systems with John Pasmore, founder and CEO of Latimer AI and advisor to the Artificiality Institute. Latimer represents a fundamentally differ…
De Kai: Raising AI [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 54:57
In this conversation, we explore how humans can better navigate the AI era with De Kai, pioneering researcher who built the web's first machine translation systems and whose work spawned Google Translate. Drawing on four…