Extended Intelligence
Barack, David L, Jaegle, Andrew
–arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence
We argue that intelligence -- construed as the disposition to perform tasks successfully--is a property of systems composed of agents and their contexts. This is the thesis of extended intelligence. We argue that the performance of an agent will generally not be preserved if its context is allowed to vary. Hence, this disposition is not possessed by an agent alone, but is rather possessed by the system consisting of an agent and its context, which we dub an agent-in-context. An agent's context may include an environment, other agents, cultural artifacts (like language, technology), or all of these, as is typically the case for humans and artificial intelligence systems, as well as many non-human animals. In virtue of the thesis of extended intelligence, we contend that intelligence is context-bound, taskparticular and incommensurable among agents. Our thesis carries strong implications for how intelligence is analyzed in the context of both psychology and artificial intelligence.
arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence
Sep-15-2022
- Country:
- Europe > United Kingdom
- England
- Cambridgeshire > Cambridge (0.04)
- Oxfordshire > Oxford (0.04)
- England
- North America > United States
- Pennsylvania (0.04)
- Europe > United Kingdom
- Genre:
- Research Report (0.50)
- Industry:
- Education > Assessment & Standards (0.46)
- Health & Medicine > Therapeutic Area
- Neurology (0.46)
- Technology:
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence
- Cognitive Science (1.00)
- Machine Learning (1.00)
- Natural Language (0.66)
- Representation & Reasoning > Agents (1.00)
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence