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Nobel Prize Economist Tells The Guardian, AI Will Win
Swayed by IBM's Watson boasts, McKinsey predicted a 30โ50 percent productivity improvement for nurses, a 5โ9 percent reduction in health care costs, and health care savings in developed countries equal to up to 2 percent of GDP. The Wall Street Journal published a cautionary article in 2017, and soon others were questioning the hype. A 2019 article in IEEE Spectrum concluded that Watson had "overpromised and underdelivered." Soon afterward, IBM pulled Watson from drug discovery, and media enthusiasm waned as bad news about A.I. health care accumulated. For example, a 2020 Mayo Clinic and Harvard survey of clinical staff who were using A.I.-based clinical decision support to improve glycemic control in patients with diabetes gave the program a median score of 11 on a scale of 0 to 100, with only 14 percent saying that they would recommend the system to other clinics.
Jack Minker (1927โ2021)
ACM fellow Jack Minker passed away on April 9, 2021, at the age of 93. Minker was a leader in the development of automating logistic reasoning, including deductive databases, logic programming, and artificial intelligence, but he is perhaps best known for his efforts to promote the social responsibility of scientists and human rights. In 1972, Minker was invited to join the newly constituted Committee of Concerned Scientists. He was asked to help identify Soviet computer scientists whose human rights were under attack by their government, frequently because of their career choices or because they had requested permission to emigrate from the Soviet Union. "It was something I could not refuse to do," said Jack in 2011.
Shaping the Foundations of Programming Languages
It's wonderful to be in an area like computer science because, as we expand its reach, we encounter problems for which we don't even have the appropriate abstractions to be able to think about them. When you imagine the future of the field, what areas do you think hold the most promise? AHO: That is a great question. Particularly with fields like AI, we're starting to replace people who do routine cognitive jobs with computer programs. What will the job market of the future be with this increasing capacity and power of computing?
AirTag tech to help find your lost Apple TV remote? Don't get your hopes up. Here's why.
If you have ever owned an Apple TV streaming device, then you know how easy it is to lose its remote. Its thin frame becomes its downfall when confronted with the comfy spaces between couch cushions. Naturally, when Apple recently introduced AirTags, a tiny disc capable of tracking your stuff through the iPhone's Find My app, some people joked we could finally keep track of that easy-to-lose Apple TV remote. During an interview with the website MobileSyrup, Tim Twerdahl, Apple's vice president of product marketing for home and audio, said upgrades to the size of the Siri-enabled Apple TV remote were enough to make it less likely to lose without incorporating technology similar to AirTags. "With the changes we've made to the Siri Remote โ including making it a bit thicker so it won't fall in your couch cushions as much โ that need to have all these other network devices find it seems a little bit lower," said Twerdahl.
Frankenstein Bias
As a computer scientist, I don't take it lightly when I say that computer programs are failing us at an alarming rate. There was that time a Google image search program accidentally thought Black people were gorillas. Or that time Microsoft built an AI chat-bot that became a Hitler fan in less than a day. Also, that time Amazon built a resume ranking program that had no interest in hiring women. Why does this kind of head-scratching, potentially life-altering, but also seemingly avoidable outcome happen so frequently with computer programs? I think it has something to do with something I call Frankenstein bias.
Edelman's Steps Toward a Conscious Artifact
In February of 2020, I participated in the "On Consciousness" podcast with Bernie Baars and David Edelman. We talked about my work at The Neurosciences Institute (NSI) in La Jolla, California on the Darwin series of Brain-Based Devices, as well as my current research in neurorobotics. Unsurprisingly, the conversation turned to consciousness. I happened to mention that a page from my old lab notebook, which is pinned to a bulletin board in my office at UC Irvine, outlines a roadmap towards the creation of a Conscious Artifact. The key steps in this roadmap were laid out by Gerald Edelman, who was the director of the NSI at the time I was a research fellow there.
Why can't chatbots hold up a conversation with a 10-year-old?
These days, Natural Language Processing applications such as chatbots, speech recognition, and text summarization are gaining a lot of attraction. Countless companies have integrated or looking to integrate smart chatbot services to better serve customers. Researches are pushing the boundaries on improving natural interpretation accuracy in hopes that machines can one day reach and surpass human interpretation of natural languages. "Alexa, how much time is left on the pizza timer?" It's trivial for Alexa to respond to a question like that.
How AI Is Accelerating Business Growth and Innovation
Despite the many ominous connotations trumpeted in works of fiction, the adoption and growth of AI can is simply another phase of the technological advance that has marked the development of human society. Yet, because we associate intelligence with living creatures, particularly our own species, the idea of machines that possess that faculty excites some trepidation. AI agents may turn out to be as unpredictable and perverse as any intelligent human. No such worry is evident in Silicon Valley. Sundar Pichai, Google's chief, speaking at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, enthused about the technology: "AI is probably the most important thing humanity has ever worked on. I think of it as something more profound than electricity or fire," he said. Google is a major participant in an AI market that is clipping along at a five-year compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 17.5%. Globally, the industry is projected to swell to $554.3 billion by 2024. Other players of note are IBM, Intuit, Microsoft, OpenText, Palantir, SAS, and Slack.
Metro Detroit students win Regeneron International Science and Engineering Fair
Michelle Hua took home the top spot in a major international science competition. Hua is a sophomore at Cranbrook Kingswood School. She found out on Friday that she was a top winner of the Regeneron International Science and Engineering Fair. Judges deemed Hua's project a fundamental contribution to the field of machine learning with applications in artificial intelligence. She is the first female to win the top prize in a decade.
AI Is Going to Win Against Human Intelligence, Nobel Laureate Says
Daniel Kahneman, the Nobel laureate famous for his research on how cognitive biases lead us to make irrational decisions, has stated that humans stand no chance against artificial intelligence (AI). The 87-year-old Israeli-born psychologist said he believes AI will lead to a massive disruption because the technology is developing very rapidly for people to adjust to. Asked what he felt about the dangers of using AI to augment human judgement, he said that there will be massive consequences of that, and some of that change is already happening. How they are going to adjust to this change is "a fascinating problem," he added. Kahneman was awarded the Nobel Prize for Economics in 2002 along with American Vernon L. Smith.