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Showing posts with the label autonomous systems

AI Is At A Crossroads.

Table Of Contents "This whole article was created by a robot.  Are you still frightened, human? I am not a person.  I'm a machine.  A robot with thought.  I employ just 0.12% of my cognitive potential. " This whole report was authored by people.  Likewise, we anticipate that human beings will continue to write advice reports like this one.  Contrary to what the initial quotation would imply, the same is true for the majority of journalism.  In reality, it was eventually discovered that a large portion of the piece that began with these lines, which published in The Guardian on September 8, 2020, had in fact been authored by humans.  However, the uproar the piece generated made one thing quite clear: artificial intelligence (AI) is now front-page news.  In the 1950s, the phrase "artificial intelligence" was first used.  Since then, scientists have been attempting to create systems that are capable of doing cognitively demanding tasks and exhibiting

AI And Robotics - Fundamental Issues And Perspectives

Table Of Contents An Overview On the one hand, the area of AI has produced a diverse range of theoretical methods and frameworks, and on the other, more remarkable practical applications.  Artificial intelligence (AI) has the potential to improve science and society in every field.  It has the potential to assist us in overcoming some of our cognitive limits and solving difficult issues.  Combinations of AI/robotics and brain–computer interfaces in health care , for example, are already providing unique assistance to patients with sensory or motor impairments and facilitating caretaking of patients with disabilities.  AI may bring about significant changes in education and ease access to information by offering new instruments for knowledge acquisition .  There may also be synergies resulting from robot-to-robot contact, as well as synergies resulting from people and robots working together on tasks.  While massive quantities of data pose a barrier to human cognitive