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Unsettling dance piece explores how AI is warping human relationships

Inspired by Shannon Vallor's book The AI Mirror, this compelling piece looks at how we are being affected by our deepening interactions with tech
Alexander Whitley Dance Company, Mirror.
A scene from Mirror by the Alexander Whitley Dance Company
Oskein

Traditional ballet with tutus and pointe shoes is my preferred night at the theatre, but I enjoyed a contemporary piece recently at London鈥檚 Sadler鈥檚 Wells East.

The piece, , by the Alexander Whitley Dance Company, will also be at the city鈥檚 Royal Opera House on 4 June. It is inspired by the book The AI Mirror by Shannon Vallor, a professor in the ethics of data and artificial intelligence, in which she argues for and against the use of AI. Vallor wants us to find a middle ground between passively resigning ourselves to AI as a replacement for our agency, and seeing it as an existential threat that must be defeated.

As a science journalist, I like the balance of Vallor鈥檚 book, but, for me, this didn鈥檛 translate to the dance piece. Instead, its compelling (and slightly unsettling) choreography and staging seemed to show how our deepening interactions with AI and other tech are warping human relationships. Go see it for yourself, and make up your own mind.

Topics: Artificial intelligence / Culture