God AI:What to Expect When Machines Outsmart Us
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Description
At the dawn of a new era of artificial intelligence, will we see an age of prosperity, or are we sowing the seeds of our own destruction . . .
For decades, some theoretical scientists have suggested that artificial intelligence will lead to the extinction of a humanity made obsolete. We can already see the beginnings of this, they claim, as human jobs are lost to computer automation.
For some of those people, it's become fashionable to stockpile supplies in underground bunkers in anticipation of "the singularity" — the point at which the development of artificial intelligence will outpace our capacity to control it.
Other, more optimistic experts suggest that, properly regulated, AI will be a great boon to science, dramatically increasing the efficiency of scientific research and medical treatment. Researchers at MIT, for example, have used a deep learning model to identify a chemical compound to treat E. Coli infections. Likewise, the 2024 Nobel Prize in Chemistry was awarded to the developers of Google DeepMind for devising a system to map proteins much more quickly than humans could before.
Toby Walsh, a leading researcher of AI at the University of New South Wales has monitored the development and influence of artificial intelligence since before most people had a computer in their home. Looking back over the history of its development, he lays out the ways in which we use this technology, the history of its evolution, and what we can do to navigate it going forward. | Toby Walsh is Scientia Professor of Artificial Intelligence at the University of New South Wales and a Fellow of the Australia Academy of Science. He is an advocate for limits to ensure AI is used to improve our lives, and has been a leading voice in the discussion about lethal autonomous weapons (aka killer robots), speaking at the UN in New York and Geneva on the topic. He appears regularly on TV and radio, and is the author of Machines Behaving Badly: The Morality of AI, and Machines that Think: The Future of Artificial Intelligence. Dr. Walsh lives in Sydney.
For decades, some theoretical scientists have suggested that artificial intelligence will lead to the extinction of a humanity made obsolete. We can already see the beginnings of this, they claim, as human jobs are lost to computer automation.
For some of those people, it's become fashionable to stockpile supplies in underground bunkers in anticipation of "the singularity" — the point at which the development of artificial intelligence will outpace our capacity to control it.
Other, more optimistic experts suggest that, properly regulated, AI will be a great boon to science, dramatically increasing the efficiency of scientific research and medical treatment. Researchers at MIT, for example, have used a deep learning model to identify a chemical compound to treat E. Coli infections. Likewise, the 2024 Nobel Prize in Chemistry was awarded to the developers of Google DeepMind for devising a system to map proteins much more quickly than humans could before.
Toby Walsh, a leading researcher of AI at the University of New South Wales has monitored the development and influence of artificial intelligence since before most people had a computer in their home. Looking back over the history of its development, he lays out the ways in which we use this technology, the history of its evolution, and what we can do to navigate it going forward. | Toby Walsh is Scientia Professor of Artificial Intelligence at the University of New South Wales and a Fellow of the Australia Academy of Science. He is an advocate for limits to ensure AI is used to improve our lives, and has been a leading voice in the discussion about lethal autonomous weapons (aka killer robots), speaking at the UN in New York and Geneva on the topic. He appears regularly on TV and radio, and is the author of Machines Behaving Badly: The Morality of AI, and Machines that Think: The Future of Artificial Intelligence. Dr. Walsh lives in Sydney.
PUBLISHER:
Melville House
ISBN-10:
1685893015
ISBN-13:
9781685893019
BINDING:
Paperback / softback
NUMBER OF PAGES:
160
BOOK DIMENSIONS:
8.00(H) x 5.00(W)
AUDIENCE TYPE:
General / adult
LANGUAGE:
English