SUSANNA Reid was freaked out by a robot that LOOKS like her and even speaks on Good Morning Britain today.

The robot sported brunette hair and large brown eyes just like pretty Susanna and was able to answer questions in the bizarre demonstration.

Ayda, who blinks and moves her head, is the world's first robot artist and her creator Aidan stood by her side.

Piers asked Ayda to speak and she obediently responded: "Good morning Britain, and good morning Piers and Susanna."

He also asked the robot to repeat the words 'Piers, you are so right about everything' which she did, but Ayda added: "Susanna, was that OK to say that?"

Ayda's jaw-dropping improvisation left the pair stunned, and Piers remarked: "Hold on, you're not supposed to have your own brain. I don't like this."



Ayda is the first of her type and Aidan said that the demonstration had never been done before.

He explained the robot has cameras fitted into its eyes that are connected to an algorithm which allows it process data.

He also showed off abstract paintings that it had created with its robot arms.

Co-host Richard Arnold, who had been listening in and was holding a broom, quipped: "Am I going to have to give this to Ayda to fly home? She gives me the creeps."


It comes after The Sun reported that life-like dolls could be so real you can’t tell the difference.

Just like out of the film The Stepford Wives, where husbands replace their partners with sexually subservient spouses, robots are being created that are so real that we may not be able to tell them apart from humans.

What's more, Artificial Intelligence could create a population of babe bots that will be “walking among us” incognito.

Speaking to the Daily Star Online, sex robot expert Brick Dollbanger said eventually the cyborgs will be so real in appearance and their thought process and speech they will be “everywhere”.

He said: “I know enough about robotics to understand that, in the next few years, robots will be walking among us.

“We’ll see them everywhere, in some shape or form, they’ll be there. In 100 years, we won’t be able to tell them apart from humans.”

 

Source: Read Full Article