Breaking News

The New viaim OpenNote Makes Press Debut at IFA 2025 Showcasing Lifestyle Earbuds with AI Power for Work and Play Hisense Unveils RGB-MiniLED Display Breakthroughs and Immersive Sound Innovations at IFA 2025 TCL Showcases Latest Display Technologies and AI Innovations at IFA 2025 Samsung announces Galaxy Tab S11 and Galaxy S25 FE series TEAMGROUP Launches EXPERT P34F Find My External SSD

logo

  • Share Us
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
  • Home
  • Home
  • News
  • Reviews
  • Essays
  • Forum
  • Legacy
  • About
    • Submit News

    • Contact Us
    • Privacy

    • Promotion
    • Advertise

    • RSS Feed
    • Site Map

Search form

Google To Add Smart Reply Suggestions To Email Client

Google To Add Smart Reply Suggestions To Email Client

Enterprise & IT Nov 3,2015 0

Google is trying to make email smarter by adding a Smart Reply suggestion feature to your inbox. Based on machine intelligence technology, your device will attempt to suggest relevant responses to your daily emails. Smart Replies gives users up to three quick options to send back in reply to emails based on a machine learning analysis of the message's content. People can use the short replies as either a way to quickly respond, or a way to start a longer message.

Rolling out out on Inbox for Android and iOS later this week, the Smart Reply suggestion feature is built on a pair of recurrent neural networks, one used to encode the incoming email and one to predict possible responses.

The encoding network consumes the words of the incoming email one at a time, and produces a vector (a list of numbers). This vector captures the gist of what is being said without getting hung up on diction -- for example, the vector for "Are you free tomorrow?" should be similar to the vector for "Does tomorrow work for you?" The second network starts from this thought vector and synthesizes a grammatically correct reply one word at a time, like it’s typing it out. According to Greg Corrado, Senior Research Scientist, the detailed operation of each network is entirely learned, just by training the model to predict likely responses.

One challenge of working with emails is that the inputs and outputs of the model can be hundreds of words long. This is where the particular choice of recurrent neural network type really matters. Google's engineers used a variant of a "long short-term-memory" network (or LSTM for short), which is particularly good at preserving long-term dependencies, and can home in on the part of the incoming email that is most useful in predicting a response, without being distracted by less relevant sentences before and after.

In developing Smart Reply, Google adhered to the user privacy standards -- in other words, no humans reading your email. This means researchers have to get machine learning to work on a data set that they themselves cannot read.

The first prototype of the system had a few unexpected quirks. For instance, when Google asked the neural network for the three most likely responses, it’d cough up triplets like "How about tomorrow?" "Wanna get together tomorrow?" "I suggest we meet tomorrow." That’s not really much of a choice for users. The solution was a machine learning system for mapping natural language responses to semantic intents. This was instrumental in several phases of the project, and was critical to solving the "response diversity problem": by knowing how semantically similar two responses are, Google can suggest responses that are different not only in wording, but in their underlying meaning.

Tags: Google
Previous Post
Hearts Replace 'Favorite' Stars on Twitter
Next Post
Firefox Now Offers More On Private Browsing

Related Posts

  • Google announces Pixel 10, Pixel 10 Pro Fold and Pixel Buds 2a

  • Elevate your gameplay across mobile and PC

  • What’s new in Android 15, plus more updates

  • NVIDIA Teams Up With Google DeepMind to Drive Large Language Model Innovation

  • Google at CES 2024

  • Google introduces Gemini AI model

  • Google Cloud Launches AI-Powered Anti Money Laundering Product for Financial Institutions

  • Connecting all things Android at MWC Barcelona

Latest News

The New viaim OpenNote Makes Press Debut at IFA 2025 Showcasing Lifestyle Earbuds with AI Power for Work and Play
Consumer Electronics

The New viaim OpenNote Makes Press Debut at IFA 2025 Showcasing Lifestyle Earbuds with AI Power for Work and Play

Hisense Unveils RGB-MiniLED Display Breakthroughs and Immersive Sound Innovations at IFA 2025
Consumer Electronics

Hisense Unveils RGB-MiniLED Display Breakthroughs and Immersive Sound Innovations at IFA 2025

TCL Showcases Latest Display Technologies and AI Innovations at IFA 2025
Consumer Electronics

TCL Showcases Latest Display Technologies and AI Innovations at IFA 2025

Samsung announces Galaxy Tab S11 and Galaxy S25 FE series
Smartphones

Samsung announces Galaxy Tab S11 and Galaxy S25 FE series

TEAMGROUP Launches EXPERT P34F Find My External SSD
Consumer Electronics

TEAMGROUP Launches EXPERT P34F Find My External SSD

Popular Reviews

be quiet! Dark Mount Keyboard

be quiet! Dark Mount Keyboard

be quiet! Light Loop 360mm

be quiet! Light Loop 360mm

be quiet! Light Mount Keyboard

be quiet! Light Mount Keyboard

Terramaster F8-SSD

Terramaster F8-SSD

be quiet! Light Base 600 LX

be quiet! Light Base 600 LX

Noctua NH-D15 G2

Noctua NH-D15 G2

Soundpeats Pop Clip

Soundpeats Pop Clip

be quiet! Pure Base 501

be quiet! Pure Base 501

Main menu

  • Home
  • News
  • Reviews
  • Essays
  • Forum
  • Legacy
  • About
    • Submit News

    • Contact Us
    • Privacy

    • Promotion
    • Advertise

    • RSS Feed
    • Site Map
  • About
  • Privacy
  • Contact Us
  • Promotional Opportunities @ CdrInfo.com
  • Advertise on out site
  • Submit your News to our site
  • RSS Feed