How to Speak to a Robot

The newest wave of interest in Artificial Intelligence is different from the two others I have experienced. In the mid 1970’s, I, and many others became enamored with the idea that we might actually be able to build tools that could think for themselves. Imagine, I thought…” a drill that knows where to drill and can get up to do it by itself while I sat sipping a Pina Colada on the beach!” This admittedly weird example may at first seem useless until you fill in the context behind it. The 1970’s ushered in a kind of microelectronics revolution of sorts in the United States. At that time I still owned a tube tester and needed it from time to time. Transistors were becoming “old school” and new integrated circuits began to be the rage. My Radio Shack soldering iron and stacks of old tube driven radios and televisions (from where my back stock of parts came) were quickly replaced by shelves bursting with those dark blue Integrated Circuit manuals from places like Hamilton Avnet and Texas Instruments. Continue reading “How to Speak to a Robot”

Are we some other society’s Experiment in AI?

Here’s something to consider. I am constantly having to change  the way I think to break down boundaries that my limited worldview (in this case universe view) have set on my mind. A few years ago, the notion that we live in a “MATRIX-Like” simulation gained popularity among scientists. My initial response was to reject even the possibility of such a notion. However, my thinking this week has led me to now consider this question as a distinct possibility. What if we are  someone else’s experiment in developing an artificial intelligence? Since we know that time is an artificial construct, this suddenly opens up the possibility that we might just be ants under the looking glass being studied by an advanced race.

Do you have an opinion? I’d like to hear what you have to say on this subject. Thanks   Dr. Andy.

Where will the Path towards Artificial Intelligence Take Us?

I have worked in for most of my fifty-year scientific career in artificial Intelligence (AI)-related fields studying both human and artificial processing methods. With the recent resurgence in interest in AI in our society, I have been surprised by how easily humans have accepted the inevitability of AI as a part of our lives. As we blindly push forward, concepts such as autonomy, machine control and decision-making, risk and machine ethics are all being tossed around without much thought for the long-term implications for the human race. I thought a few words about where I believe we might end up might be interesting. [The following excerpt is taken from a book I am currently writing.] Continue reading “Where will the Path towards Artificial Intelligence Take Us?”

Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning: Part 5: Complexity

In this series I am writing several blog articles about Artificial Intelligence. This week’s article, the last in the series, introduces the CORE toolset that can be used by the Government under an existing license to meet most of its AI/ML needs. Continue reading “Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning: Part 5: Complexity”

Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning: Part 1: Defining Artificial Intelligence

In this series, I am writing several blog articles about Artificial Intelligence. We finally have enough processing power and memory to accomplish great things. However, after 40 years of working in this field I am amazed at what some companies are trying to sell as Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning. The purpose of these articles is to help the reader sift through the hype and discriminate real AI/ML from useless marketing that lacks real substance. This week’s articles concentrate on a simple but important aspect of the AI/ML problem….What is the REAL definition of AI and ML? Continue reading “Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning: Part 1: Defining Artificial Intelligence”

Artificial Intelligence or Artificially Augmented Intelligence?

Earlier this year I wrote an article on LINKEDIN that questioned the Government’s stated desire to develop Artificial Intelligence (AI) for use in military systems. My point being that true AI (sometimes called Real AI), cannot be controlled or validated and this makes it unsuitable for implementation in a machine capable of destroying human life. Continue reading “Artificial Intelligence or Artificially Augmented Intelligence?”