Meet the 21-year-old woman who lost her voice to disease—but can now speak using an AI clone trained on 15 seconds of her teenage voice. https://t.co/yAyOAVC1dQ
Bogan is one of the first people—the only one with her condition—who have been able to re-create a lost voice with OpenAI's new Voice Engine. https://t.co/oNNuujuEyr
I lost my voice because of a tumor — but an AI clone gave it and my confidence back to me https://t.co/1IpTTeiKda https://t.co/aIYOi9DhpX












In April, Alexis Bogan, a 21-year-old from Rhode Island, who lost her ability to speak fluently due to brain surgery, has regained a version of her voice through artificial intelligence. Doctors working with ChatGPT-maker OpenAI utilized AI technology to create a synthetic replica of her old voice, which she can now use via a phone app. This AI-generated voice allows her to communicate effectively, restoring a significant part of her identity and capabilities. The technology, described as a voice clone, is noted for its realistic sound, enabling Bogan to say almost anything she wants. Bogan's breakthrough is hoped to make her a trailblazer in AI applications for medical rehabilitation.