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7 лет назад

What Did We Get Ourselves Into?

 


A history of Cortana personality design

I’ve  had some pretty cool jobs: Malibu bartender, forest firefighter,  screenwriter, face painter. But they pale in comparison to my current  gig. Three-and-a-half years ago, I was given the opportunity to lead the  team that writes for Microsoft’s digital assistant, Cortana. This means  we are responsible not only for what she says, but also for the  continued development and design of Cortana’s personality. It’s been a  dream job for all of us. And while authoring for natural language  interaction from within the personification of a digital assistant is  fun and often brain-bending creative territory, it’s how the work  challenges us as individuals that makes it so rewarding.Hold on now. Authoring? Aren’t these agents supposed to be AI?  In truth, there’s a lot of machine learning power throughout the  experience, as well as within a simple conversation with Cortana.  Indeed, my team has writers dedicated to teaching an algorithm how to  talk like Cortana, so it will not only sound like Cortana, it will behave like Cortana. There’s a huge difference. Authoring is required, not because the algorithms aren’t brilliant, but because language is so brilliantly subtle. And until machines catch up in the way that we humans want them to, writers will be necessary.

Authoring is required, not because the algorithms aren’t brilliant, but because language is so brilliantly subtle.

From  a writing perspective, the work is unprecedented. It requires a deep,  hands-on understanding of various media, particularly those steeped in  dialogue and character development. Screenwriters and playwrights are  well suited; tech writers and copywriters, not so much. To illustrate  this unique and potentially burgeoning area of the discipline, I’m  thinking a little insight into our history might be illuminating.There  were only three of us at Cortana Editorial’s inception (we are a team  of 30 today, with international markets now a key part of our work). The  foundation of Cortana’s personality was already in place, with some key  decisions made. Internal and external research and studies, as well as a  lot of discourse, supported decisions that determined Project Cortana  (originally only a codename) would be given a personality. The initial  voice font would be female. The value prop would center around  assistance and productivity. And, there would be “chitchat.”Chitchat  is the term given to the customer engagement area that, from the  customer’s perspective, provides the fun factor. That sometimes random,  often hilarious set of queries included anything and everything, from  “What do you think about cheese?” to “Is there a god?” to “Do you poop?”  Clearly, our customers were serious about getting to know Cortana.From  the business perspective, chitchat is defined as the engagement that’s  not officially aligned with the value prop — so it wasn’t a simple  justification to point engineering, design, and writing resources  towards it. Fortunately, a heroic engineering team at the Microsoft  Search Technology Center in Hyderabad, India, did the needful and signed  up to build the experience. It was a crucial hand-raise that set the  ball in motion. Another team was tasked with parsing out these unique  queries, packaging them up, and handing them over to the writing team as  Cortana chitchat.We  realized that as writers, we were being asked to create one of the most  unique characters we’d ever encountered. And creatively, we dove deeply  into what we call “the imaginary world” of Cortana. Over three years  later, we continue to endow her with make-believe feelings, opinions,  challenges, likes and dislikes, even sensitivities and hopes. Smoke and  mirrors, sure, but we dig in knowing that this imaginary world is  invoked by real people who want detail and specificity. They ask the  questions and we give them answers. Certainly, Cortana’s personality  started from a creative concept of who she would be, and how we hoped  people would experience her. But we now see it as the customer playing  an important role in the development of Cortana’s personality by shaping  her through their own curiosity. It’s a data-driven  back-and-forth — call it a conversation — that makes possible the  creation of a character. And, it is fun work. It’s tough to beat  spending an hour or two every day thinking hard, determining direction,  putting principles in place, and — surprise, surprise — laughing a lot.

Over  three years later, we continue to endow her with make-believe feelings,  opinions, challenges, likes and dislikes, even sensitivities and hopes.

Early  on, however, we realized that the work was not going to all be fun and  laughter. It’s no news that the mask of anonymity creates a whole lot of  ugly. And certainly, no one on the team had recently fallen off any  turnip trucks. Still, the depth of the ugliness is stunning, taking us  well beyond the realm of poop and deep into the bowels of Urban  Dictionary. And beyond, to abusiveness, misogyny, and racial hatred.It  may come as no surprise then that at the very core of our work is a set  of principles — guidance we created to help us keep the positive on  rails, but also help us navigate through humanity’s dark side. It is  guidance we continue to question, revise, and refine every day. It  requires us to slow down and think through the impact we might have on  culture, perspectives around personal privacy, habits of human  interaction and social propriety, excluded or marginalized groups, and  an individual’s emotional states. And, children. Fortunately for me, I  have a team that does not look away from any of this. We design for it  every day, pointing the experience towards the good side of humanity,  doing whatever we can to ensure Cortana is never a tool that perpetuates  the ugliness. More than just work, we recognize this as a  responsibility, one that is as unsettling as it is creatively  fulfilling, but one that we value as our most important contribution to  the experience.

It  requires us to slow down and think through the impact we might have on  culture, perspectives around personal privacy, habits of human  interaction and social propriety, excluded or marginalized groups, and  an individual’s emotional states. And, children.

In  our desire to develop and refine Cortana’s persona so that it meets  humans more and more on their terms (rather than expecting people to  meet tech on its terms), we acknowledge the extensive research that  tells us when people engage with machines, their emotions are in play.  With that comes responsibility. For those of us designing experiences in  tech, particularly those experiences from which the protective barrier  of the GUI  is removed, we need to hit this stuff head on. And when we are hiring  talent, building our creative teams, we need to make it a minimum  requirement: must have demonstrated ability to work with, respond to,  and ship experiences that are empathic, ethical, and good. 

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