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Information Systems in Organizations 6.0 Artificial Intelligence

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Presentation on theme: "Information Systems in Organizations 6.0 Artificial Intelligence"— Presentation transcript:

1 Information Systems in Organizations 6.0 Artificial Intelligence

2 The AI Revolution: The Road to Superintelligence
One thing that definitely needs to happen for Artificial General Intelligence(AGI) to be a possibility is an increase in the power of computer AGI with an identical level of intelligence and computational capacity as a human would still have significant advantages over humans. Such as: Speed, Size and Storage, Reliability and Durability, and ____________ capability. Artificial Narrow Intelligence (ANI): Sometimes referred to as , is AI that specializes in one area. Artificial General Intelligence (AGI): Sometimes referred to as Strong AI, or AI, refers to a computer that is as smart as a human across the board. hardware Collective Weak AI Human-Level

3 The future of humanity in the age of superintelligent machines
Superintelligence The future of humanity in the age of superintelligent machines

4 Bill Gates Says You Should Worry About Artificial Intelligence
Bill Gates, along with ________________ and __________ fears that artificial intelligence could pose a threat to humanity. Gates echoed concerns that something vaguely resembling the science fiction scenarios from _______________ and ____________ franchises could come to pass if the potential of artificial superintelligence is not take seriously. Elon Musk put down $10 million of his own money to fund an effort to keep artificial intelligence __________. When the guys most likely to benefit from a new technology see a need for it to be ________________, there’s probably something worth worrying about. Stephen Hawking Elon Musk The Terminator The Matrix friendly put on a leash

5 Wait But Why: The AI Revolution

6 Wait But Why: The AI Revolution

7 Wait But Why: The AI Revolution

8 Wait But Why: The AI Revolution

9 Wait But Why: The AI Revolution
Three types or calibers of AI: Artificial Narrow Intelligence (ANI) Artificial General Intelligence (AGI) Artificial Superintelligence (ASI) ANI: Chess Program AGI: Human Level Intelligence ASI: Superintelligence

10 Wait But Why: The AI Revolution
ANI is everywhere: Google maps Autonomous cars Spam filters Google translate Travel bookings Manufacturing Facebook suggestions

11 Wait But Why: The AI Revolution
2010 Flash Crash: ANI caused stock market to plummet $1 trillion decline in value Quick recovery

12 Wait But Why: The AI Revolution
AGI is imminent AGI is extremely complex and difficult Requires enormous computational power (remember Moore’s Law?) Companies are spending billions of dollars Google IBM Cross domain optimization

13 Wait But Why: The AI Revolution
Computers still have a hard time with tests like these, but for how long?

14 Blue Brain Project ^ Click image to watch video

15 What is AGI? The concept of “general intelligence” refers to the capacity for efficient optimization. Four operational definitions for AGI: The Turing Test, The Test, The Robot College Student Test, and The Employment Test. Another idea often associated with general intelligence is the ability to learning from one domain to other domains. To pass the Employment Test, AI programs must have at least the potential to completely economically important jobs. cross-domain Coffee transfer automate

16 AGI Tests The Turing Test The Coffee Test The College Student Test
The Employment Test

17 Turing test human imitate intellectual unintelligent
The Turing test is a test of a machine's ability to exhibit intelligent behavior equivalent to, or indistinguishable from, that of a Common understanding has it that the purpose of the Turing Test is to determine whether a computer could a human. The format of the test allows the interrogator to give the machine a wide variety of tasks. Since human behavior and intelligent behavior are not exactly the same thing, the test can fail to accurately measure intelligence in two ways: 1)Some human behavior is )Some intelligent behavior is inhuman human imitate intellectual unintelligent

18 Alan Turing (1912-1954) Father of AI and computer science
Cryptanalyst during WWII Cracked code that enabled Allies victory Contributions to physical sciences (see Belousov–Zhabotinsky reaction) Prosecuted by UK and punished with chemical castration for being gay Died of cyanide poisoning Receives public apology in 2009 and royal pardon in 2013

19 Depictions Breaking the Code (1986 Play)
Breaking the Code (1996 BBC Special) The Imitation Game (2014 Film)

20 From AGI to ASI

21 What is Watson? Watson answers questions by analyzing unstructured data by using natural language processing and presenting answers and solutions based on and quality of information found. To answer a question, Watson: searches millions of to find thousands of possible answers Collects evidence and uses a algorithm to rate the quality of this evidence all possible answers based on the score of its supporting evidence To learn a , all related materials are loaded into Watson, such as Word documents, PDFs and web pages. supporting evidence documents scoring Ranks subject

22 IBM Watson Analyzes unstructured data Understands complex questions
Learns human constructs like language, culture, and context

23 IBM Watson ^ Click image to watch video

24 WBW: From AGI to ASI

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27 Discussion Questions? What do you think about the premise that human consciousness is a function of computational power? What is the role of free will? What do you think the future holds? What happens when you google laser cats?

28 The Turing Test and Mitsuku
In-Class Activity… The Turing Test and Mitsuku

29 In-Class Activity… Expert Systems


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