Étiquette : artificial intelligence (Page 17 of 24)

«Comment le défenseur ou le garde s’oriente-t-il par rapport à vous ? Dans un jeu, on court après un ballon, dans l’autre, on manie l’épée, le contenu est évidemment très différent, mais du point de vue de l’intelligence artificielle, il y a beaucoup de similitudes. Idem pour la coordination d’un groupe : que ce soit une équipe ou une garnison, les problématiques pour nous sont les mêmes» – Ashraf Ismail.

Source : « “FIFA” et “Assassin’s Creed”, beaucoup de similitudes dans l’intelligence artificielle »

«Neural nets are just thoughtless fuzzy pattern recognizers, and as useful as fuzzy pattern recognizers can be—hence the rush to integrate them into just about every kind of software—they represent, at best, a limited brand of intelligence, one that is easily fooled. A deep neural net that recognizes images can be totally stymied when you change a single pixel, or add visual noise that’s imperceptible to a human. Indeed, almost as often as we’re finding new ways to apply deep learning, we’re finding more of its limits. Self-driving cars can fail to navigate conditions they’ve never seen before. Machines have trouble parsing sentences that demand common-sense understanding of how the world works.Deep learning in some ways mimics what goes on in the human brain, but only in a shallow way—which perhaps explains why its intelligence can sometimes seem so shallow».

Source : Is AI Riding a One-Trick Pony? – MIT Technology Review

«Au-delà du sort d’un acteur historique – si prestigieux soit-il –, l’IA promet la révolution, mais elle est encore en enfance. Pour grandir, il lui faudra réussir non seulement le pari de l’industrialisation mais aussi celui de l’opinion et des politiques.Tous engagés dans la course, les géants du numérique cristallisent les inquiétudes et savent qu’ils seront de plus en plus comptables des conséquences sociétales que laissent entrevoir les prouesses de cette technologie pas comme les autres».

Source : Watson, le savant calcul d’IBM

« White-Collar Offender Tends to have a low self-esteem, a high IQ and charisma. Anxious, tensed and frustrated, competitive, ambitious and dominant. Usually loves to take risks and have a dry sense of humor » – Description of White-Collar Offender…

Source : FACEPTION | Our Technology

«Meet Todai Robot, an AI project that performed in the top 20 percent of students on the entrance exam for the University of Tokyo — without actually understanding a thing».

AI needs regulating because the big tech companies have got too big for their own good. And like every other industry sector before it that has got too big – the banks, the oil companies, the telecom firms – regulation is needed to ensure the public good. To ensure that we all benefit and not just the tech elite.
We’re beginning to see the corrosive effects of Facebook’s algorithms on political debate, of Amazon’s dominance of the retail sector, and of Google’s monopoly on search. And it’s hard to know where to begin with a company like Uber. There’s just so much to criticise.
However, the problems today are not caused by super smart AI, but stupid AI.

Source : Elon Musk is wrong. The AI singularity won’t kill us all | WIRED UK

« Over the past week, our bot was undefeated against many top professionals including SumaiL (top 1v1 player in the world) and Arteezy (top overall player in the world). Dota 1v1 is a complex game with hidden information. Agents must learn to plan, attack, trick, and deceive their opponents. The correlation between player skill and actions-per-minute is not strong, and in fact, our AI’s actions-per-minute are comparable to that of an average human player ».

Elon Musk ne comprend peut-être rien à l’IA, mais Tesla et OpenAI ont « un peu » d’avance sur Google, et beaucoup sur Facebook…

Imaginons un monde où le Go serait comme le morpion !

Source : Open AI – Dota 2

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