Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Emerging Tech
  3. News

Your next job interview might be conducted by an AI

Add as a preferred source on Google

There’s nothing quite like a job interview to incite angst in recent college graduates. But the job recruitment process can be taxing for both applicants and companies, which spend long hours flipping through troves of résumés to determine the best candidates. In an attempt to streamline hiring, FirstJob, a millennial-focused HR company, has launched a recruiting assistant named Mya that they say can automate up to 75 percent of the recruitment process.

The system uses machine learning and natural language processing to perform an initial screen, answer applicants’ questions, give feedback, and provide suggestions on how an applicant should proceed. Meanwhile, the system gives businesses much-needed breathing room when attempting to qualify large groups of potential candidates.

Recommended Videos

“[Mya] understands language and is able to answer any question a candidate has about the company, culture, benefits, and even the hiring process,” Eyal Grayevsky, co-founder & CEO of FirstJob, told Digital Trends. “She serves as an ‘always available’ recruiting assistant, delivering that white-glove candidate experience that every company strives for. If Mya doesn’t have an answer to a question, a recruiter jumps in to provide the response. Mya learns from those answers so that a recruiter never has to answer the same question twice, becoming increasingly intelligent and autonomous over time.”

Here’s Mya in action with a mock NASA applicant:

Artificial intelligence might seem like it would undermine the “human” aspect of human resources, but Grayevsky insists that the system won’t depersonalize the recruitment process. Today’s recruiters are often overwhelmed by the sheer quantity of applications, he points out, which leaves many applicants without even a single response from their potential employers. Mya is meant to let companies engage with every applicant.

The system is also designed to be “human-like” but not to deceive candidates. “We make it very clear to the candidate that Mya is an AI bot,” Grayevsky said. “This is reinforced throughout the UI and in her dialogue with each candidate to avoid confusion.” So, the next time you apply for a job at companies like Oracle, Gap, or Fitbit, your first point of contact might actually be an AI.

Dyllan Furness
Former Contributor
Dyllan Furness is a freelance writer from Florida. He covers strange science and emerging tech for Digital Trends, focusing…
This jacket pulls drinking water straight from the air
Engineers at UT Austin have developed a wearable textile that harvests ambient moisture into drinkable water.
Image showing person wearing a jacket with special fiber that pulls water from air

Engineers at the University of Texas at Austin have built a jacket that pulls drinkable water directly from the air, offering a potential solution for hikers, soldiers, agricultural workers, and emergency responders who operate far from reliable water sources.

How the jacket collects water

Read more
Google built an AI that can see football plays before they happen
DeepMind’s latest research predicts player movement up to eight seconds into the future
Google Deepmind TacticAI Featured

Football managers spend countless hours analyzing corners, free kicks, and player positioning in search of tiny competitive advantages. Google DeepMind believes artificial intelligence can make that process significantly faster, and its latest project, TacticAI, is designed to do exactly that. TacticAI is a football-specific AI assistant capable of modeling player movement, forecasting future play dynamics, and even recommending tactical adjustments for corner kicks. One of its standout abilities is predicting player trajectories up to eight seconds into the future using only broadcast-style visual data.

TacticAI was built with Liverpool FC and validated by football experts

Read more
Radical new coffee-making method uses sound, skips hot water and reduces energy bills
UNSW reserachers brewed espresso with room-temperature water and ultrasonic sound waves, cutting energy use by 75% in blind tests that fooled 100 regular drinkers.
Person brewing espresso in a lab with a modified ultrasonic espresso machine

Researchers at UNSW Sydney have figured out how to brew espresso-strength coffee without heating any water. The method replaces hot water and high pressure with ultrasonic sound waves, and in blind taste tests involving 100 regular coffee drinkers, participants could not tell the two apart.

How it works

Read more