Since the time of Turing, computer scientists have dreamed of building
artificial general intelligence (AGI) - a system that can think, learn
and act as humans do. Over recent years, the remarkable pace of
progress in machine learning research has reawakened discussions about
AGI. But what would a generally intelligent agent be able to do? What
algorithms, architectures, or cognitive functions would it need? To
answer these questions, we turn to the study of natural intelligence.
Humans (and many other animals) have evolved precisely the sorts of
generality of function that AI researchers see as the defining
hallmark of intelligence. The fields of cognitive science and
neuroscience have provided us with a language for describing the
ingredients of natural intelligence in terms of computational
mechanisms and cognitive functions and studied their implementation in
neural circuits. Natural General Intelligence describes the algorithms
and architectures that are driving progress in AI research in this
language, by comparing current AI systems and biological brains side
by side. In doing so, it addresses deep conceptual issues concerning
how perceptual, memory and control systems work, and discusses the
language in which we think and the structure of our knowledge. It also
grapples with longstanding controversies about the nature of
intelligence, and whether AI researchers should look to biology for
inspiration. Ultimately, Summerfield aims to provide a bridge between
the theories of those who study biological brains and the practice of
those who are seeking to build artificial brains.
Les mer
How understanding the brain can help us build AI
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780192657664
Publisert
2022
Utgiver
Oxford University Press Academic UK
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter