unilad homepage
  • News
  • Film and TV
  • Music
  • Tech
  • Features
  • Celebrity
  • Politics
  • Weird
  • Community
  • Advertise
  • Terms
  • Privacy & Cookies
  • LADbible Group
  • LADbible
  • SPORTbible
  • GAMINGbible
  • Tyla
  • UNILAD Tech
  • FOODbible
  • License Our Content
  • About Us & Contact
  • Jobs
  • Latest
  • Topics A-Z
  • Authors
Facebook
Instagram
X
Threads
TikTok
YouTube
Submit Your Content
'Extremely accurate' AI death calculator predicts when you'll die

Home> Technology

Updated 11:47 21 Dec 2023 GMTPublished 11:49 21 Dec 2023 GMT

'Extremely accurate' AI death calculator predicts when you'll die

An AI algorithm has been able to predict the likelihood of death of its subject according to a study.

Gerrard Kaonga

Gerrard Kaonga

google discoverFollow us on Google Discover

If there weren’t enough reasons to be fearful of the artificial intelligence boom, scientists have found that it can be used to predict when you’ll die.

Just like with the introduction of any new technology, artificial intelligence (AI) has sparked a slew of fears.

We might look back and laugh just like we did at those who were fearful of the radio, television and the internet.

Advert

And while not everyone wants to know exactly how long they have to live, a newly developed AI death calculator, known as 'life2vec', seems to be able to predict when a person will die with surprising accuracy.

You would be pleased to know we haven’t strayed so far into sci-fi that a computer program can simply look at you and give you a date of death - but it is still slightly alarming regardless.

“We use the technology behind ChatGPT (something called transformer models) to analyze human lives by representing each person as the sequence of events that happens in their life,” Sune Lehmann, lead author of the December 2023 study told the New York Post.

“Using sequence of life-events to predict human lives”

Essentially with enough information, AI can get determine whether you are likely to die early or not.
Getty Stock Image

Lehmann, who is a professor of network and complex systems from the Technical University of Denmark, explained how the algorithm they'd developed works.

It factors in the typical things such as income, profession, residence and health history — to determine life expectancy with 78 percent correctness.

So essentially with enough information, the model can get determine what your personality is like - as well as when you are likely to die.

An impressive piece of tech to put it bluntly.

Lehmann’s group used the algorithm and predicted the life expectancy of 6 million Danish people who varied in sex and age to discover which of the subjects would likely live for at least four years beyond January 1, 2016.

The algorithm predicted life expectancy with 78 percent correctness.
Getty Stock Image

Using the public information of its subjects and assigning specific 'digital tokens' to each piece of data, life2vec correctly predicted who had died by 2020 more than three quarters of the time.

Thanks to the sheer scale of the data collected, it had allowed them to 'construct sequence-level representations' of their 'individual human life trajectories'.

The report adds: "We can observe how individual lives evolve in a space of diverse event types (information about a heart attack is mixed with salary increases or information about moving from an urban to a rural area).”

Lenham also stressed that none of the participants had been told their predictions, calling it 'very irresponsible' to do so.

It's certainly eerie stuff but less so when you consider the facts that with enough information and time, you could probably do the same thing - though it would admittedly make for some morbid conversation.

Featured Image Credit: D-Keine/Josh Blake/Getty Images

Topics: Artificial Intelligence, Technology

Gerrard Kaonga
Gerrard Kaonga

Gerrard is a Journalist at UNILAD and has dived headfirst into covering everything from breaking global stories to trending entertainment news. He has a bachelors in English Literature from Brunel University and has written across a number of different national and international publications. Most notably the Financial Times, Daily Express, Evening Standard and Newsweek.

Advert

Advert

Advert

  • Microsoft AI CEO predicts the specific jobs that will be replaced by AI within the next 18 months
  • Elon Musk makes huge change to Grok AI and Twitter users aren't happy
  • Expert predicts how much free time humans will have as he reveals how many jobs AI will actually replace
  • Stephen Hawking had terrifying answer when asked about the future of AI

Choose your content:

a day ago
2 days ago
6 days ago
  • Shawn Ryan Show via YouTube
    a day ago

    'Stranded' NASA astronaut recalls moment he thought he was going to die in space

    Barry Wilmore was stuck in space for a period of nine months before returning to Earth

    Technology
  • Ignatiev/Getty Images
    a day ago

    Why NASA can't track every meterorite as agency misses huge blast over Ohio

    It's pretty unsettling stuff...

    Technology
  • Getty Stock Photo
    2 days ago

    OpenAI warned against creating X-rated 'adult mode' as it could create a ‘sexy suicide coach’

    In January, Chief Executive Sam Altman said the company was considering enabling erotic conversation into ChatGPT

    Technology
  • Getty Stock Images
    6 days ago

    Reason why you're receiving so many scam calls and how you can spot them

    The FTC has detailed some of the red flags to be aware of

    Technology