Volt wrote:They've already GOt Robots that can create Virtual Worlds, from looking at rooms and hallways. I've seen highschools building them, Artificial Intelligence and everything.
ClosetOtaku wrote:Since it's part of my professional field, I feel comfortable saying without hesitation that Artificial Intelligence, as it was originally conceived and usually defined, has yet to be achieved.
So... we're still far away from AI, and many professionals have given up any immediate hope that we're going there. We've tried expert systems, complex algorithms, recursive programs in LISP, neural networks (now there's a parlor trick if there ever was one)... nothing seems to work. We may not have the fundamental knowledge we need to make that happen yet. Someday, we might.
It's a little late, but I also loved that pic. you found Technomancer.
Technomancer wrote:You do robotics/AI? What sort of development do your work on?
Volt wrote:AI is all around us... in everything from robots to videogames.
Too bad currently it's nothing but a bunch of "if___ then___" statements.
Volt wrote:I'm just being harsh because deep down inside, no matter how unemotional something is... i still give it human characteristics, This one time i droped a rock on the floor and I said "i'm so sorry" to it. ... ... ... poor rock.
ClosetOtaku wrote:I do Informatics - especially user interface design, trying to figure out how users will tolerate data input and output modalities, both at the novice and expert level. Much of my AI work is therefore in speech recognition and natural language processing for medical facilities. I did some AI work in college (Carnegie-Mellon U, home of the Robotics Institute), but that was theoretical]
Cool, you probably already know, but my own area of research is neural networks and signal processing.I'm a skeptic about neural networks, especially as it pertains to the functioning of the mysterious "hidden layer"; to me, it is little more than an expert system where we didn't bother specifying the underlying program parameters and we're giving the output more credit than it is due. It's the cyber equivalent of a rat trained to do tricks: we can attribute intelligence, but any similarity between intelligence and what is coming from the rat is purely coincidental. But, I have to admit, it's pretty cool when it works right.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 233 guests