Tieto Evry
Alicia T - Artificial intelligence CEO
Summary.
I did the UX and concept designs for an artificial intelligence CEO. This is not science fiction, read more about it here.
The actual CEO part is actually here to gather data from thousands of resources simultaneously in real-time and create and alert board members about events and trends that might affect the business.
The following screens all are wireframes and not the final product. I worked with Eliana Sarpila banging our heads together to figure this out.
This has been one of the most difficult project I have done, due to the uniqueness and sheer strangeness of the product.
The problem & the first solution.
Since the AI CEO is called Alicia T, it has a personality already with it’s name. Therefore I created a small animation everytime a user accesses the interface (to be viewed on large monitors in meeting rooms) where a female head disintegrates in to dots and group in to topic clusters.
Each dot represents a topic that is trending according the sources that Alicia T is crawling through.
Essentially, it is listening to chatter on the Internet and creating decisions on which topics in it’s vast database matches that chatter and surfaces those to be visible and tries to connect the dot to other dots in order to make sense what caused the trending of the topic.
Board members can pick Alicia’s brain by entering search terms. By typing in mutliple terms the relationships between the dots change and the superclusters morph.
Any supercluster can be accessed by tapping it, which opens the detailed view when and what topics created the supercluster.
Any dot in the supercluster represents a cluster of topics that created the trend. (Below)
Any topic can be hovered over to see in which clusters it belongs to and vice versa.
The second version.
The second iteration was made to be much simpler and properly support large, ultra-wide screens with a 10-foot interface.
The instructions are displayed always and belong to the interface as diegetic UI. Alicia is meant to be used sporadically by people who might not be familiar with how to use it.