AI improves our social skills?

Imagine an AI proficient in diagnosing individuals who struggle with social interactions, creating personalized programs to help them improve communication skills and navigate social situations.

Neurodivergent individuals, particularly those on the autism spectrum, could be equipped with tools to overcome social hurdles, significantly enhancing their quality of life.

AI-assisted virtual reality could enable users to practice these skills in controlled environments, gradually learning to decipher social cues and recognize facial expressions, ultimately helping them better understand human interactions.

Paradoxically, it is precisely those on the spectrum—who often approach life in a more literal and rational way—who may be best equipped to understand how a new AI-driven society operates.

Computer engineers, once proficient in programming languages, could now find themselves rendered obsolete when AI makes English the primary coding language. Their new role may instead involve teaching socially outgoing individuals how to think and design in the concrete, logical ways required to thrive in an AGI-dominated society.