Artificial Intelligence (AI) – Grey cells, anyone?
A brief study of the what’s and how’s and why’s of Artificial Intelligence. Developing purely logic-based programs (as we see in the computers of today) can only create machines, and not intelligence.
| Comments on article "Artificial Intelligence (AI) – Grey cells, anyone?" |
| Name |
Views and Comments | Date |
| Stephen Dolle |
I believe the attainable step in the evolution towards more advanced AI will come as technology manufacturers learn how to interface human thought and language programming into hand held devices. the next big step, I believe, lies in widescale incorporating of voice recognition technology into PDAs, mobile phones, and computerized devices. New applications and interface technologies will then follow. As this occurs, we will discover how new brain implants can expand our useful intelligences.
I already received a brain implant, and have developed many new skills. See Dolle Communications. |
10/2/2006 |
| RogersFriend |
AI? it already has been done. In 1970 professor Roger Vogelsang took the EPR experiment 1 step further and wondered if the escaping proton knew ahead of time, so he connected a KVM switch to his simple "device" and his slow 386 computer and then ran a simple random character generator and whola, the escaping proton tripped the switch at certain intervals and actually had conversations with Roger. He called it the "self thinking interface". Look it up on google. It was proven that the escaping proton is intelligent and the cool thing is that everything is made up of protons that decay. How do you think we get our intelligence, artificially or by the escaping protron of our decaying brain cells? He tried to file a patent on his device and the papers were mysteriously destroyed in a post office fire. Then he became a hunted man by our D.O.D. until his untimely death in 2001. His secrete went with him. So they believe. |
7/7/2004 |
| Dave |
Sir Ray Choudhury, Very nice article. But nowhere in your article did i find the mention of the "opposable thumb" which is one of the most important signs of our evolution as compared to other fauna. Also, I noticed that you said that "The Terminator" is something to be expected in the distant future. I beg to disagree. As you are probably aware that Sony has come up with a toy, a pup, which is programmed to "learn". This is a very important breakthrough. Although the term learn, here means more about reacting or choosing to react in one particular manner among the many options present and programmed, nevertheless it is a form of learning. Thats what The Terminator was about. The android or humanoid was not so scary because of its brute force, but more due to the fact that it was programmed to learn from the reactions of others around it. So we already are much closer than we imagined. However the lesson here may be that we just need to behave lest we prompt the machines to react unfavourably like we humans do |
6/18/2004 |
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