How AI Might Shape LGBTQIA+ Advocacy
AI comes out of the closet is an LLM-based online system that leverages AI-generated dialog and virtual characters to create complex social interaction simulations. These simulations allow users to experiment with and refine their approach to LGBTQIA+ advocacy in a safe and controlled environment.
Why This Topic?
The research is both personal and political to lead author, D. Pillis, rooted in a landscape where LGBTQIA+ people continue to navigate the complexities of identity, acceptance, and visibility. Pillis's work is driven by the need for advocacy simulations that not only address the current challenges faced by the LGBTQIA+ community, but also offer innovative solutions that leverage the potential of AI to build understanding, empathy, and support. This project is meant to test the belief that technology, when thoughtfully applied, can be a force for societal good, bridging gaps between diverse experiences and fostering a more inclusive world.
"AI has always been queer."
— D. Pillis
Pillis highlights the significant yet often overlooked connection between the LGBTQIA+ community and the development of AI and computing. He says, "AI has always been queer. Computing has always been queer," drawing attention to the contributions of queer individuals in this field, beginning with the story of Alan Turing, a founding figure in computer science and AI, who faced legal punishment—chemical castration—for his homosexuality. Contrasting Turing’s experience with the present, Pillis notes the acceptance of OpenAI CEO Sam Altman’s openness about his queer identity, illustrating a broader shift towards inclusivity. This evolution from Turing to Altman highlights the influence of LGBTQIA+ individuals in shaping the field of AI.
"There's something about queer culture that celebrates the artificial through kitsch, camp, and performance," states Pillis. AI itself embodies the constructed, the performative—qualities deeply resonant with queer experience and expression. Through this lens, he argues for a recognition of the queerness at the heart of AI, not just in its history but in its very essence.
D. Pillis found a collaborator with Pat Pataranutaporn, PhD student in the Media Lab's Fluid Interfaces group. As is often the case at the Media Lab, their partnership began amid the Lab's culture of interdisciplinary exploration, where Pat's work on AI characters met Pillis's focus on 3D human simulation.
"It's about how you can support...human growth and development."
— Pat Pataranutaporn
Taking on the challenge of interpreting text to gesture-based relationships was a significant technological hurdle. In Pataranutaporn's research, he emphasizes creating conditions where people can thrive, not just fix issues, aiming to understand how AI can contribute to human flourishing across dimensions of "wisdom, wonder, and well-being." In this project, Pataranutaporn focused on generating the dialogues that drove the virtual interactions. "It's not just about making people more effective, or more efficient, or more productive. It's about how you can support multi-dimensional aspects of human growth and development."