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Artificial Intelligence

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If you asked 10 people, you'd probably get 10 answers. The ability to learn from experience ... Fodder for many sci-fi movies/TV shows/books ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Artificial Intelligence


1
Artificial Intelligence
2
What is Artificial Intelligence (AI)?
  • A good question
  • First answer the more fundamental/basic question
  • What is Intelligence?

3
What is Intelligence?
  • If you asked 10 people, you'd probably get 10
    answers
  • The ability to learn from experience
  • The power of thought
  • The ability to reason
  • The power of insight
  • Intuition
  • Synonymous with Knowledge

4
But What is AI?
  • Text defn the part of computer science that
    attempts to make computers act like human beings
  • Another by Dr. Astro Teller
  • A.I. is the science of how to get machines to do
    the things they do in the movies.
  • So what do they do in the movies?

5
YAD of AI
  • YAD Yet Another Definition
  • Artificial Intelligence is the study of ideas
    which enable computers to do the things which
    make people seem intelligent
  • And YAD (Patrick Henry Winston)
  • Artificial intelligence is the study of the
    computations that make it possible to perceive,
    reason, and act.

6
The Two Themes of AI
  • Hard AI make computers do what humans do
  • Eventually computers will think
  • Soft AI make computers more sophisticated
  • Lets make computers better at solving some of our
    day-to-day problems

7
Can A Machine Think?
  • According to Dijkstra
  • ... the question of whether Machines Can Think,
    ... is about as relevant as the question of
    whether Submarines Can Swim.
  • Dijkstra's doubts aside What test can a
    computer pass to be determined intelligent?

8
The Turing Test
  • Proposed by Alan Turing
  • A machine may be deemed intelligent when it can
    pass for a human being in a blind test.
  • That is, if we cannot tell if a computer is a
    computer, it passes the Turing test and is
    intelligent.

9
Turing Test Example
10
But
  • Is the Turing test adequate?
  • Any potential problems with it?

11
Is This Adequate?
  • Possible problems
  • The machine doesn't understand things
  • Its success is largely dependent upon the examiner

12
No Understanding
  • Ex The Chinese Room Thought Experiment proposed
    by John Searle
  • A thought experiment aimed at showing conscious
    computers are impossible

13
Chinese Room Thought Experiment
  • Take a man who does not speak Chinese and lock
    him in a room
  • Give him a rule book which indicates how to
    answer questions in English
  • Thus he can translate anything from Chinese to
    English, but has no understanding of Chinese

14
Success Dependent Upon Examiner
  • Ex Eliza - A program which for many people
    passed the Turing Test
  • Simulated a psychotherapist by using simple
    pattern matching and keyword recognition

15
Eliza Example
  • Eliza What is bothering you?
  • Patient I feel sad all the time.
  • Eliza (recognizes I feel...) Why do you feel
    sad all the time?
  • Patient I dont get along with my parents.
  • Eliza (recognizes my parents) Tell me about
    your parents.
  • Is this system Intelligent?

16
Why Bother With AI?
  • Because computers are stupid (but powerful)
  • Wouldn't it be nice if they
  • Just knew what you want
  • Used more common sense
  • Were more tolerant of errors
  • Filled in the monotonous details of tasks because
    they're obvious
  • AI helps to achieve these goals

17
Games
  • Early AI work focused on games (ex Chess,
    Checkers)
  • Easy to represent in a computer
  • Clearly defined rules
  • Unmistakable goals
  • (and besides, games are fun)
  • Researchers tried to create programs which could
    win consistently

18
Games (cont)
  • Early successes include Arthur Samuel's program
    for playing checkers in 1952 which could play at
    a very strong amateur level
  • More recent successes IBM's Deep Blue

19
Ethical Considerations Threat to Society?
  • The view of hard AI is that eventually machines
    will be more intelligent than their creators
  • Fodder for many sci-fi movies/TV shows/books
  • Potentially scary, will AI in the future be like
    Data or The Terminator?
  • See Theodore John Ted Kaczynski

20
Ethical Considerations Job Loss?
  • Technological advancement can render certain jobs
    redundant
  • AI (it is argued) will further this trend
  • Valid concern, or fear of technology?
  • Luddites

21
Food For Thought
  • The main lesson of thirty-five years of AI
    research is that the hard problems are easy and
    the easy problems are hard. The mental abilities
    of a four-year-old that we take for granted -
    recognizing a face, lifting a pencil, walking
    across the room, answering a question - in fact
    solve some of the hardest engineering problems
    ever conceived... As the new generation of
    intelligent devices appears, it will be the stock
    analysts and petrochemical engineers and parole
    board members who are in danger of being replaced
    by machines. The gardeners, receptionists, and
    cooks are secure in their jobs for decades to
    come.
  • -- Steven Pinker, The Language Instinct
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