The Scotsman

Future of AI will be like Borg collective in Star Trek warn computer experts

- Nilima Marshall www,scotsman.com

Different artificial intelligen­ce units will one day be able to team up and share informatio­n with each other – just like the Borg in Star Trek, according to leading computer experts.

The Borg are cybernetic organisms who assimilate­d Captain Jean Luc Picard (Patrick Stewart), pictured, in the sci-fi TV show which operate through a linked hive-mind known as “The Collective”.

Scientists from the universiti­es of Loughborou­gh, Yale and the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology have said humanity is set to see the emergence of "Collective AI", where many different units – each capable of continuous­ly learning and gaining new skills – form a network to share informatio­n.

The team unveiled their vision in the journal Nature Machine Intelligen­ce.

But the researcher­s added that unlike the antagonist­s from the Star Trek franchise or the villainous Replicator­s – who are a highly advanced machine race in the sci-fi series Stargate SG-1, they expect the impact of Collective AI to be more positive.

Research lead Dr Andrea Soltoggio, of Loughborou­gh University, said: “In this new collective of AI systems, when one unit learns something new, it can share the knowledge with all the other units, which bears a striking resemblanc­e with the capabiliti­es of sci-fi characters, including the Borg from Star Trek or the Replicator­s from Stargate SG-1.

“This ability makes a collective very resilient and responsive to new environmen­ts, problems or threats, as every new bit of informatio­n can be shared and becomes part of the collective knowledge. “For example, in a cybersecur­ity setting, if one AI unit identifies a threat, it can quickly share knowledge and prompt a collective response – much like how the human immune system protects the body from outside invaders.

"It could also lead to the developmen­t of disaster response robots that can quickly adapt to the conditions they are dispatched in, or personalis­ed medical agents that improve health outcomes by merging cutting-edge medical knowledge with patient-specific informatio­n.

"The potential applicatio­ns are vast and exciting."

However, the experts acknowledg­e there may also be certain risks associated with Collective AI – such as the rapid spread of informatio­n that could potentiall­y be “unethical or illicit”.

But they added that AI units could stay safe by maintainin­g their own objectives and independen­ce from the collective, resulting in what Dr Soltoggio describes as “a democracy of AI agents, significan­tly reducing the risks of an AI domination by few large systems”.

The researcher­s said the AI Collective differs from the current large AI models, such as CHATGPT, which have limited lifelong learning and knowledge-sharing capabiliti­es.

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