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Published byPriscilla Elliott Modified over 9 years ago
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Artificial Intelligence Computers Think!
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What is thinking? The question is not ‘Do computers think the way humans think or at the same level? but whether they think – period. Thought or thinking is a mental process which allows beings to model the world and deal with it effectively according to their goals, plans, ends and desires. More efficient at thought than humans – this does not mean it is at a higher level.
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Instinct Humans do some things by instinct Beating Heart (genetic structure determines the development of the part of the brain that controls the heart – you don’t control your heartbeat) Computers do some things by instinct CPU fan turns on when computer comes on (electricity causes fan to run – the software does not tell it to turn on or off)
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RAM = Short Term Memory Hard Drive = Data we commit to memory by memorization or things we deem important You are the sum of your parents’ genes and your experiences – mathematical equation A computer is the sum of it’s hardware and software.
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Consciousness Computers can be introspective (can reflect on past experiences) Deal in absolutes - no gray area in memory (remember everything exactly as it happened) computers do not forget what they have learned Humans are unable to remember everything exactly as it happened (eyewitness accounts most unreliable form of testimony in court) Humans can fabricate false memories
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Teaching Humans know how to do things because they are taught. Potty Trained Computers know how to do things because they are taught. Installing Software
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Examples of Thought Internet Explorer Sites you frequent regularly – saves data so that it opens faster, deletes data pertaining to sites you rarely view. Computer knows to do this because it has been taught to do so Memorizing by repetition Humans remember things that they encounter frequently (memorizing vocabulary words but repeating them over and over)
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Protection Classic example of thought: A person is taught that something is dangerous to him, so he does not do it (not eating poison or doing something that is harmful to your health) Computer is taught that something is dangerous to it, so it does not do it (virus scanning software recognizes a dangerous process and does not allow it to run)
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Computers are like Children Lower level thought processes – computers cannot think at the level of an adult, yet. However, just because a child cannot think at the same level as an adult, does that mean that the child is not able to think?
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Computers are like Children What will a child do when encountering chocolate in a wrapper for the first time? With no previous exposure Wants to eat it but does not know how to open the wrapper With previous (personal) exposure Knows how to open the wrapper and can eat it, because it wants to After being taught that chocolate is bad for your teeth Wants to eat it, but has been taught not to do so.
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Children are like Computers What will a computer do when encountering a new process for the first time? With no previous exposure Intrinsically designed to run basic processes – however, more complex processes (MS Word with a virus) cannot be run With previous (personal) exposure With Windows installed, MS Word with the virus can be run After having virus software installed Will attempt to run the process, however, it’s ‘teaching’ will prevent it from doing so. It is important to note that without being taught, the computer will run the virus anyway. If all causes of a preference were exposed, it would (in fact) no longer a preference, but would be a predisposition
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Personality/Genetics Where do the “goals, plans, ends and desires” come from? They originate in only two places: Nature (genetic predispositions) and Nurture (developmental environment) Genetics = hardware (Compaq, Dell, Gateway, Mac) Developmental Environment = software (Windows, Linux, Mac OS X, Internet Explorer, Mozilla Firefox) Computers, like humans, will act a certain way based on these two characteristics.
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We understand how computers work/think because we created them. When you came into Comp Sci 1 did you understand how your computer worked? No, but you accepted that others know exactly how it worked/thought and it was no longer mystical. Nobody knows exactly how people work/think – so it is obviously something that cannot be applied to anything else
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Creativity Sum and expression of experiences The ‘illusion’ of creativity Creativity is ultimately where one person makes connections which another doesn’t
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Deceptive Simplicity Computers allow us to examine the most basic principles of thought Indeed, each method we write in lab should exemplify the role of problem solving in computers and humans Again, the only reason we assume that computer do not have goals and desires, is because we know (without a doubt) what the causes of its actions are Therefore, it is unfair to lump computers (even the most simplistic computers) into a non- thinking category
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Bias Humans believe that since we can manipulate computers, they don’t think for themselves. Yet a baby is manipulated by it’s parents (potty-training, anyone?) does that mean it doesn’t think for itself?
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Fundamental Understanding Having a “fundamental understanding” of a piece of information is nothing more than the utility of the information – how it is useful. A child does not have a fundamental understanding of why he or she should use a toilet when going to the bathroom. It is taught by it’s parents that it is useful to do so. This teaching instills in the child an understanding of hygiene and courtesy to other people “Understanding” in this sense is only how being potty- trained is useful to these two ends (or how being potty- trained is useful in avoiding punishment)
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References Making Machines Creative http://www.psych.utoronto.ca/~reginold/co urses/ai/cache/creativity_article,_v2.html http://www.psych.utoronto.ca/~reginold/co urses/ai/cache/creativity_article,_v2.html http://www.psych.utoronto.ca/~reginold/co urses/ai/cache/creativity_article,_v2.html AI Tutorial http://www.psych.utoronto.ca/~reginold/co urses/ai/ai.html http://www.psych.utoronto.ca/~reginold/co urses/ai/ai.html http://www.psych.utoronto.ca/~reginold/co urses/ai/ai.html Wikipedia http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/artificial_intellig ence http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/artificial_intellig ence http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/artificial_intellig ence
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