Meet the maker of artificial intelligence
Bennett, from Indiana, came to Wellington five years ago, to work at Weta Digital. He’s “instructed” the facial movement on film of Angelina Jolie, John Malkovich and Anthony Hopkins.
In fact, Bennett was sitting beside Hopkins figuring out how to recreate him digitally when he thought to himself, “I could probably build this in real life.”
He gave his idea a go, and based it on wire frame mesh. It worked.
Now he’s got two patents on the go. One’s for AI, the artificial intelligence that’s at the heart of his designs, and the other’s for the robotic skins and muscles he uses to mould the intelligence into a human form.
Bennett focuses on artificial intelligence that’s increasingly smart and sensitive, like the intelligence of “that guy in the video game who’s trying to kill you.”
It’s hard to imagine that one day a computer could be as intelligent as a human, says Bennett, but he reckons it’ll happen, “I’m a bit of a futurist.”
He says his technology has a wide application, from video games to toys, movie sets to medical science and space exploration.
“Mimic figures out the world around you and adds a body to it,” he says.
The Brightest Idea prize in the competition was won by Helen Joronen of Greenkeeper Systems, who won the top award of $25,000 by dreaming up a planet-saving device that switches computers off when they’re not in use.










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