AI and AGI: Past, Present and Future

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Pat Langley Computational Learning Laboratory Center for the Study of Language and Information Stanford University, Stanford, California USA
Advertisements

Pat Langley Computational Learning Laboratory Center for the Study of Language and Information Stanford University, Stanford, California USA
Cognitive Systems, ICANN panel, Q1 What is machine intelligence, as beyond pattern matching, classification and prediction. What is machine intelligence,
Artificial Intelligence
Aaron Summers. What is Artificial Intelligence (AI)? Great question right?
Artificial Intelligence
Welcome to the First International Summer School on Artificial General Intelligence.
Introduction to AI Kaziwa H. Saleh. What is AI? John McCarthy defines AI as “the science and engineering to make intelligent machines”. AI is the study.
An Introduction to Artificial Intelligence. Introduction Getting machines to “think”. Imitation game and the Turing test. Chinese room test. Key processes.
Presentation By: Tripti Negi Priyanka Kapil gogia Gurpeet Singh.
Achieving Advanced Machine Consciousness via Artificial General Intelligence in Virtual Worlds Ben Goertzel, PhD.
WHAT IS ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE?
Artificial Intelligence Austin Luczak, Katie Regin, John Trawinski.
Random Administrivia In CMC 306 on Monday for LISP lab.
1. 1 Text Book Artificial Intelligence: A Modern Approach, S. Russell and P. Norvig, 3/e, Prentice Hall, 2010 References  Artificial Intelligence, Patrick.
Artificial Intelligence
Wilma Bainbridge Tencia Lee Kendra Leigh
Artificial Intelligence & Cognitive Science By: Andrea Pope, Cindy Burdine, and Kazumi Inoue.
Artificial Intelligence What’s Possible, What’s Not, How Do We Move Forward? Adam Cheyer Co-Founder, VP Engineering Siri Inc.
CPSC 171 Artificial Intelligence Read Chapter 14.
The Future Of AI What’s Possible, What’s Not, How Do We Get There? Adam Cheyer Co-Founder, VP Engineering Siri Inc.
Artificial Intelligence Andrea Danyluk For FPS 2/2/04.
IRC Learning and the Novamente Cognition Engine Imitative-Reinforcement-Corrective Learning: A Robust Learning Methodology for Virtual Pets and Avatars.
ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE Introduction: Chapter 1. Outline Course overview What is AI? A brief history The state of the art.
1 AI and Agents CS 171/271 (Chapters 1 and 2) Some text and images in these slides were drawn from Russel & Norvig’s published material.
Alan Turing In 1950 asked - Can Machines Think? Turing changed that into the Turing Test “Can Computers Understand Language?” would have been.
Artificial Intelligence Dr. Paul Wagner Department of Computer Science University of Wisconsin – Eau Claire.
CISC4/681 Introduction to Artificial Intelligence1 Introduction – Artificial Intelligence a Modern Approach Russell and Norvig: 1.
Chapter 14: Artificial Intelligence Invitation to Computer Science, C++ Version, Third Edition.
Introduction: Chapter 1
Artificial Intelligence: Definition “... the branch of computer science that is concerned with the automation of intelligent behavior.” (Luger, 2009) “The.
Steps Toward an AGI Roadmap Włodek Duch ( Google: W. Duch) AGI, Memphis, 1-2 March 2007 Roadmaps: A Ten Year Roadmap to Machines with Common Sense (Push.
Artificial Intelligence: An Introduction Definition of AI Foundations of AI History of AI Advanced Techniques.
Introduction GAM 376 Robin Burke Winter Outline Introductions Syllabus.
10/3/2015 ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE Russell and Norvig ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE: A Modern Approach.
CSC4444: Artificial Intelligence Fall 2011 Dr. Jianhua Chen Slides adapted from those on the textbook website.
Artificial Intelligence Introductory Lecture Jennifer J. Burg Department of Mathematics and Computer Science.
CNS 4470 Artificial Intelligence. What is AI? No really what is it? No really what is it?
Artificial Intelligence CS 363 Kawther Abas Lecture 1 Introduction 5/4/1435.
ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE BY:Jeff Brauer, David Abarbanel, Monica Balod, Mae Anglo, Umangi Bhatt.
Introduction to Machine Learning Kamal Aboul-Hosn Cornell University Chess, Chinese Rooms, and Learning.
1 CS 2710, ISSP 2610 Foundations of Artificial Intelligence introduction.
1 Introduction to Artificial Intelligence (Lecture 1)
Due Monday Read chapter 2 Homework: –Chapter 1, exercises –Answer each in 100 words or less. Send to from your preferred.
So what is AI?.
AI: Can Machines Think? Juntae Kim Department of Computer Engineering Dongguk University.
Artificial Intelligence By: Ian, Chelsea, Doug, & Grace.
Definitions of AI There are as many definitions as there are practitioners. How would you define it? What is important for a system to be intelligent?
History of AI By: Stephen Fandrich. AI Development Timeline.
What is Artificial Intelligence? What is artificial intelligence? It is the science and engineering of making intelligent machines, especially intelligent.
Course Overview  What is AI?  What are the Major Challenges?  What are the Main Techniques?  Where are we failing, and why?  Step back and look at.
What is Artificial Intelligence?
Ben Goertzel, PhD Novamente LLC Biomind LLC Artificial General Intelligence Research Institute Virginia Tech, Applied Research Lab for National and Homeland.
FOUNDATIONS OF ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE
Artificial Intelligence: Research and Collaborative Possibilities a presentation by: Dr. Ernest L. McDuffie, Assistant Professor Department of Computer.
Artificial Intelligence, simulation and modelling.
DANCE STUDIES Methodology Session 4 …. How to teach something Link to planning and time allocation Depends on the topic – different requirements Preparation:
Artificial Intelligence
Overview of Artificial Intelligence (1) Artificial intelligence (AI) Computers with the ability to mimic or duplicate the functions of the human brain.
Artificial intelligence (AI)
Chapter 11: Artificial Intelligence
ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE.
Artificial Intelligence
Course Instructor: knza ch
Introduction Artificial Intelligent.
Artificial Intelligence introduction(2)
AI and Agents CS 171/271 (Chapters 1 and 2)
Artificial Intelligence
Artificial Intelligence Andrea Danyluk For FPS 2/2/04.
Presentation transcript:

AI and AGI: Past, Present and Future Ben Goertzel, PhD

Artificial General Intelligence (AGI) “The ability to achieve complex goals in complex environments using limited computational resources” Autonomy Practical understanding of self and others Understanding “what the problem is” as opposed to just solving problems posed explicitly by programmers

Narrow AI The vast majority of AI research practiced in academia and industry today fits into the “Narrow AI” category Each “Narrow AI” program is (in the ideal case) highly competent at carrying out certain complex goals in certain environments Chess-playing, medical diagnosis, car-driving, etc.

1950 – Alan Turing proposes a test for machine intelligence 1956 – John McCarthy coins the term “artificial intelligence” 1959 – Arthur Samuel’s checkers program wins games against the best human players 1962 – First industrial robot company, Unimation, founded 1967 – “HAL” stars in “2001: A Space Odyssey” 1969 – Stanford Research Institute: Shakey the Robot demonstrated combining movement, perception and problem solving Alan Turing Arthur Samuel Shakey John McCarthy

1971 – Terry Winograd’s PhD thesis (M. I. T 1971 – Terry Winograd’s PhD thesis (M.I.T.) demonstrated the ability of computers to understand English sentences in a restricted world of children’s blocks 1975 - John Holland’s book Adaptation in Natural and Artificial Systems formalizes and popularizes evolutionary algorithms 1982 - Doug Lenat’s self-modifying heuristic AI program EURISKO wins the Traveler TCS contest the second year in a row 1983 - Danny Hillis co-founded Thinking Machines Corporation during his doctoral work at MIT. The company was to develop Hillis' Connection Machine design into a commercial parallel supercomputer line. Terry Winograd Connection Machine John Holland Doug Lenat

1990-91 – AI technology plays a key role in the Gulf War, from automated co-pilots and cruise missiles, to overall battle coordination, and more 1997 – IBM supercomputer Deep Blue defeats world chess champion Garry Kasparov in a 6-game match 1998 -present -- Google leverages an increasing arsenal of narrow-AI technologies to provide commercially successful Web search and ad delivery 2001 - Lionhead Studio releases Black and White, a popular videogame in which players teach AI-controlled creatures using imitative and reinforcement learning Google’s First Server Gulf War Creature from Black & White Deep Blue

2001 Remove ts

Lots of real-world achievements Lots of deep, fascinating ideas Nothing close to a consensus on the right path to human-level AGI In many cases, AGI visions have given way to narrow-AI successes In

On the neuro side, we’ve come a long way since McCullough and Pitts… We can simulate a lot of spiking neurons -- but we don’t know how to connect them to yield intelligent behavior.

Today, Narrow AI Dominates the AI Field (in both academia and applications) Deep Blue - whoops us pesky humans at chess - but can’t learn to play a new game based on a description of the game rules DARPA Grand Challenge - a great leap forward -- but it can’t learn to drive different types of vehicles besides cars (trucks, boats, motorcycles) Google - fantastic service: but can’t answer complex questions. Whatever happened to AskJeeves? Remove ts

The “Common-sense Bottleneck” Narrow-AI NLP can’t handle Parse selection for complex sentences Semantic disambiguation beyond nouns and verbs Preposition disambiguation Reference resolution (esp. nominal) Contextual interpretation of comparatives Etc. Remove ts AI’s can’t yet pass the “5-year-old child Turing test”

Will Narrow-AI NLP Software Ever Correctly Interpret This Paragraph? “The world's primary source of caffeine is the coffee bean (the seed of the coffee plant), from which coffee is brewed. Caffeine content in coffee varies widely depending on the type of coffee bean and the method of preparation used; even beans within a given bush can show variations in concentration. In general, one serving of coffee ranges from 40 milligrams, for a single shot (30 milliliters) of arabica-variety espresso, to about 100 milligrams for a cup (120 milliliters) of drip coffee.” http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caffeine Remove ts

Will Narrow-AI NLP Software Ever Create a Chat Bot that Knows What It’s Talking About? Human: When someone talks to you, do you really understand what they are talking about? ALICE: That does not happen very often. Human: What doesn't happen very often? ALICE: What do you think it does? Human: Do you mean people don't talk to you much, or that you don't understand them much? ALICE: Yes, that's what I mean, isn't it clear? Human: It was an either-or question. ALICE: How did you feel about that? Human: Basically emotionally neutral. ALICE: How interesting. I'm sometimes undecided myself. Human: What do you do when you're undecided about something? ALICE: I give the most accurate replies possible. Human: What if you don't know which reply is most accurate? ALICE: Try it and see. Human: Anyway, is accuracy always the most important thing in life? ALICE: Ask again later. Ask John Lennon if it is. Human: He's dead. ALICE: Maybe it's another person using his name. Human: Why did you bring up John Lennon? ALICE: Because my programming determined it. Remove ts

Can Narrow AI Incrementally Lead to General AI? IMHO, a major lesson from the history of AI is: Narrow AI success is generally of fairly limited use as a stepping-stone toward AGI success Transferring insight from narrow-AI to AGI involves a whole lot of creative thinking And some of the key aspects of AGI may not arise in narrow-AI work at all Remove ts

2008 The Technological and Scientific Context Leaves us Poised for Dramatic AGI Progress Remove ts

Growth in Supercomputer Power Logarithmic Plot Insert slide showing Kurzweilian expected timeframe for advanced biotech development (life expectancy, genetic engineering, neuromodification, etc.) Credit: Ray Kurzweil

Exponential Growth of Computing Insert slide showing Kurzweilian expected timeframe for advanced biotech development (life expectancy, genetic engineering, neuromodification, etc.) Credit: Ray Kurzweil

Exponential Improvement of Brain Scanning Technology

Massively Multiplayer Online Game (MMOG) Subscriptions 14 million Massively Multiplayer Online Game (MMOG) Subscriptions 66% yearly growth rate

What We Have Now Fast computers internetworked Decent virtual worlds for AI embodiment Halfway-decent robot bodies Lots of AI algorithms and representations often useful in specialized areas often not very scalable on their own A basic understanding of human cognitive architecture A cruder but useful understanding of brain structure and dynamics A theoretical understanding of general intelligence under conditions of massive computational resources

…we may be on the verge of answering… Big Questions …we may be on the verge of answering… Remove ts

What’s a Workable Cognitive Cycle? Remove ts

Can Abstract Knowledge Representations Serve As an Adequate Foundation for the Adaptive Creation of Context-Specific Knowledge Representations? (and if so, what kind?) Remove ts

Must an AGI Wholly Learn Language, or Can Linguistic Resources, Statistical NLP and Commonsense KB’s Help? Remove ts

Questioning:Message(truth-query,useful) Existence:Circumstances(truth-query_1,useful) Existence:Circumstances(truth-query,useful) Usefulness:Purpose(useful,intelligence) Usefulness:Entity(useful,this) Communicate_categorization:Category(general,intelligence) Communicate_categorization:Item(general,intelligence) Communicate_categorization:Category(artificial,intelligence) Communicate_categorization:Item(artificial,intelligence) Reasoning -- nars deduction rule…

What Must a World Be That an AGI Can Develop In It? Remove ts

Can Logic Serve as a Scalable Foundation for Sensorimotor Learning? Remove ts

How Does Neural Learning Relate to Abstract Formal Models of Learning? Remove ts

Probabilistic Evolutionary Can Integrative Design Allow Multiple AI Algorithms to Quell Each Others’ Combinatorial Explosions? Probabilistic Evolutionary Program Learning Probabilistic Logical Inference Remove ts for example Economic Attention Allocation

A serious attempt at powerful, virtually embodied AGI The Novamente Cognition Engine A serious attempt at powerful, virtually embodied AGI Remove ts

Technology: Cognition Engine Novamente Cognition Engine (NCE) is an integrative AI framework aimed at powerful artificial general intelligence, and involves a unique system-theoretic framework incorporating: Knowledge representation using weighted, labeled hyper-graphs Probabilistic inference using Probabilistic Logic Networks Procedure learning using MOSES probabilistic evolutionary learning algorithm Economic methods for attention allocation and credit assignment AI algorithms integrated in such a way as to palliate each others’ internal combinatorial explosions NCE is capable of integrating multiple forms of cognitive processing and knowledge representation, including language, quantitative and relational data, and virtual agent control/perception 48

Technology: AtomTable Hypergraph Knowledge Representation 49

Technology: MOSES & PLN MOSES Probabilistic Evolutionary Learning Combines the power of two leading AI paradigms: evolutionary learning probabilistic learning Broad applicability with successful track record in bioinformatics, text and data mining and virtual agent control. Probabilistic Logic Networks (PLN) PLN is the first general, practical integration of probability theory and symbolic logic. It has broad applicability with a successful track record in bio text mining and virtual agent control. Based on mathematics described in Probabilistic Logic Networks, published by Springer in 2008 50

Intelligent Virtual Pets Novamente’s Pet Brain utilizes a specialized version of NCE to provide unprecedented intelligent virtual pets with individual personalities, and the ability to learn spontaneously and through training. Pets understand simple English, and future versions will include language generation Pet Brain incorporates MOSES learning to allow pets to learn tricks, and Probabilistic Logic Networks (PLN) inference regulates emotion-behavior interactions, and allows generalization based on experience. 51

Intelligent Pets: Training Example Novamente-powered intelligent pets can be taught to do simple or complex tricks - from sitting to playing soccer or learning a dance - by learning from a combination of encouragement, reinforcement and demonstration. teach demo encourage reinforce give “sit” command… show example… successful sit, great… clap to reinforce. 52

What this means for Virtual Worlds and Games unique content to differentiate and attract more users longer and more meaningful engagement by users opportunities to build community play dates parades agility competitions training classes social nature drives viral marketing effect 53

How Do We Guide a Successful Future for the AGI Field? Remove ts

? Books, journals…

OpenCog.org An open-source AGI framework, to be launched in 2008 Sponsored initially by Singularity Institute for AI Seeded with key software components from the Novamente Cognition Engine Intended to support flexible, open-ended development of various AI components (learning, reasoning, perception, action, representation, etc.) in an integrative-AGI context Integration with OpenSim for virtual embodiment is likely Remove ts

“I set the date for the Singularity- representing a profound and disruptive transformation in human capability- as 2045. The nonbiological intelligence created in that year will be one billion times more powerful than all human intelligence today." Ray Kurzweil The Singularity is Near (2005)

Technologies with the Potential for Radical Transformation Quick overview of Singularity technologies (maybe with one image for each): Bio … nano … robo … AI Biotech Nanotech Robotics Strong AI

A Very Hard Problem Goal Invariance Under Radical Self-Modification How to architect an AGI system so as to maximize the odds that, as it radically self-modifies and self-improves, it will not lose track of its originally programmed/taught goal system?

Another Very Hard Problem Making Sure the “Good Guys” Win Suppose we eventually do understand how to build a safe, powerful AGI How do we guarantee that this is the first kind that gets built and achieves wide influence?