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

Forget AlphaGo; China’s Alibaba is using its AI to predict TV talent show winners

Add as a preferred source on Google

Last month, Google altered our technophobic opinions on AI by using its AlphaGo program to defeat a world champion at the ancient Chinese board game of Go. Although most of us that tuned into the YouTube livestreams of the face-off were likely puzzled by the images of a computer typing out moves to a game we’d never heard of, it was a far cry from the nightmarish depictions of AI we’d become accustomed to in film and literature.

Now, China’s version of Google, Alibaba, is doing its bit to further familiarize us with the technology. Instead of tasking it with a board game that boasts limitless possibilities, however, it’s matching it up with a more pressing (and popular) task; predicting the winner of a TV singing contest.

Popular Chinese talent show 'I'm a Singer'
Popular Chinese talent show, ‘I’m a Singer’ Image used with permission by copyright holder

China’s popular reality TV show I’m a Singer will be getting the AI treatment, with Alibaba hoping it can outwit the public, and judges, by guessing the winner of the popular contest’s finale.

Recommended Videos

Simply titled “Ai”, the program was built by the ecommerce company’s cloud computing department, reports Tech in Asia. The project’s mastermind is a man named Dr. Min Wanli, who also held a research position at the IBM TJ Watson Research Center, known for its Watson AI.

Not content to tackle real-world issues, like the environment or economy, Alibaba is introducing Ai to the public on a popular platform as a proof-of-concept. In fact, the program’s entire approach will be tied to social media, which it will use to sift through mountains of data.

That makes it sound suspiciously close to a social media analytics tool. After all, the likes of Twitter and Facebook are already used by data scientists to predict everything from hurricane damage to election results. What makes Ai special, according to Alibaba, is its ability to also assess a singer’s “voice pitch and energy” and measure that against other factors, such as song choice and real-time audience response.

The Chinese tech giants’ AI will gather data throughout the course of I’m a Singer, presenting its results alongside the show’s judges. Alibaba promises that its program will be used to tackle real-world issues in the future, including other social trend predictions and personal assistance. Let’s just hope it doesn’t go rogue and nuke us all. Just kidding. That’s (probably) impossible, right?

Saqib Shah
Saqib Shah is a Twitter addict and film fan with an obsessive interest in pop culture trends. In his spare time he can be…
Coursera wants users to learn through shorter, faster content
Coursera wants online learning to feel more like TikTok
Coursera

Online learning platform Coursera is taking a page straight out of TikTok’s playbook. The company has launched a new AI-powered feed designed to serve short-form educational content in a scrollable, personalized format, signaling a major shift in how digital learning platforms may try to keep users engaged.

The feature introduces bite-sized video lessons, clips, and explainers curated through artificial intelligence based on a user’s interests, learning habits, career goals, and previous course activity. Instead of committing to hour-long lectures or full certification programs upfront, users can now discover short educational snippets designed to make learning feel more casual, accessible, and addictive.

Read more
AI fitness coach senses the muscle mechanics as you exercise and prevents rookie injuries
Most fitness apps offer encouragement dressed up as coaching, but BioCoach offers anatomy-specific corrections, and I could see it becoming a smartphone app real soon.
Woman exercises with her Apple Watch and Dexcom G7.

During the pandemic, the US Consumer Product Safety Commission recorded a 48% spike in at-home exercise injuries. You might think that the culprit was bad equipment, but it was bad form. People had no coach around to correct it.  

Researchers at Drexel University and Michigan State University have built a prototype that addresses exactly that problem, in real time, using your phone camera, and there’s real potential for it to become a legitimate fitness app in future (via Tech Xplore).

Read more
Google’s new AI app wants to replace endless scrolling with stories about your own life
Dreambeans is Google's most direct argument yet that the problem with social media isn't the content, it’s the infinite feed.
Adult, Female, Person

Most apps are designed to keep you on them as long as possible, especially content consumption apps where you scroll a never-ending feed of content. 

Dreambeans, a new experimental app from Google Labs, does the opposite. It gives you a small collection of AI-illustrated stories each morning and sends you off to live your actual life.

Read more