Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Artificial intelligen­ce

Amazing developmen­ts we were promised are finally coming

- By VIVAK WADHWA

We have been hearing prediction­s for decades of a takeover of the world by artificial intelligen­ce. In 1957, Herbert A. Simon predicted that within 10 years a digital computer would be the world’s chess champion. That didn’t happen until 1996. And despite Marvin Minsky’s 1970 prediction that “in from three to eight years we will have a machine with the general intelligen­ce of an average human being,” we still consider that a feat of science fiction.

The pioneers of artificial intelligen­ce were surely off on the timing, but they weren’t wrong; AI is coming. It is going to be in our TV sets and driving our cars; it will be our friend and personal assistant; it will take the role of our doctor. There have been more advances in AI over the past three years than in the previous three decades.

Even technology leaders such as Apple have been caught off guard by the rapid evolution of machine learning, the technology that powers AI. At its recent Worldwide Developers Conference, Apple opened up its AI systems so that developers could help it create technologi­es that rival what Google and Amazon have already built. Apple is way behind.

The AI of the past used brute-force computing to analyze data and present them in a way that seemed human. The programmer supplied the intelligen­ce in the form of decision trees and algorithms. Imagine that you were trying to build a machine that could play tic-tac-toe. You would give it specific rules on what move to make, and it would follow them. That is essentiall­y how IBM’s Big Blue computer beat chess Grandmaste­r Garry Kasparov in 1997, by using a supercompu­ter to calculate every possible move faster than he could.

Today’s AI uses machine learning in which you give it examples of previous games and let it learn from those examples. The computer is taught what to learn and how to learn and makes its own decisions. What’s more, the new AIs are modeling the human mind itself using techniques similar to our learning processes.

The new programmin­g techniques use neural networks — which are modeled on the human brain, in which informatio­n is processed in layers and the connection­s between these layers are strengthen­ed based on what is learned. This is called deep learning because of the increasing numbers of layers of informatio­n that are processed by increasing­ly faster computers. These are enabling computers to recognize images, voice, and text — and to do human-like things.

AI has applicatio­ns in every area in which data are processed and decisions required. Wired founding editor Kevin Kelly likened AI to electricit­y: a cheap, reliable, industrial-grade digital smartness running behind everything. He said that it “will enliven inert objects, much as electricit­y did more than a century ago. Everything that we formerly electrifie­d we will now ‘cognitize.’ This new utilitaria­n AI will also augment us individual­ly as people (deepening our memory, speeding our recognitio­n) and collective­ly as a species. There is almost nothing we can think of that cannot be made new, different, or interestin­g by infusing it with some extra IQ. In fact, the business plans of the next 10,000 start-ups are easy to forecast: Take X and add AI This is a big deal, and now it’s here.”

AI will soon be everywhere. Businesses are infusing AI into their products and helping them analyze the vast amounts of data they are gathering. Google, Amazon, and Apple are working on voice assistants for our homes that manage our lights, order our food, and schedule our meetings. Robotic assistants such as Rosie from “The Jetsons” and R2-D2 of Star Wars are about a decade away.

Do we need to be worried about the runaway “artificial general intelligen­ce” that goes out of control and takes over the world? Yes — but perhaps not for another 15 or 20 years. There are justified fears that AIs will start learning everything there is to learn and know far more than we do. Though some people see us using AI to augment our capabiliti­es and evolve together, others. such as Elon Musk, fear that AI will usurp us.

We really don’t know where all this will go.

What is certain is that AI is here and making amazing things possible.

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