AI Theory and Practice: A Discussion on Hard Challenges and Opportunities Ahead
Horvitz, Eric (Microsoft Research) | Getoor, Lise (University of Maryland) | Guestrin, Carlos (Carnegie Mellon University) | Hendler, James (Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute) | Konstan, Joseph (University of Minnesota) | Subramanian, Devika (Rice University) | Wellman, Michael (University of Michigan) | Kautz, Henry (University of Rochester)
So, we have a variety of people here with different interests and backgrounds that I asked to talk about not just the key challenges ahead but potential opportunities and promising pathways, trajectories to solving those problems, and their predictions about how R&D might proceed in terms of the timing of various kinds of development over time. I asked the panelists briefly to frame their comments sharing a little bit about fundamental questions, such as, "What is the research goal?" Not everybody stays up late at night hunched over a computer or a simulation or a robotic system, pondering the foundations of intelligence and human-level AI. We have here today Lise Getoor from the University ipate the liability and insurance industry; and the of Maryland; Devika Subramanian, who other one, that it was a human interface problem, comes to us from Rice University; we have Carlos that people don't necessarily want to go and type Guestrin from Carnegie Mellon University (CMU); a bunch of yes/no questions into a computer to get James Hendler from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute an answer, even with a rule-based explanation, (RPI); Mike Wellman at the University of that if you'd taken that just a step further and Michigan; Henry Kautz at tjhe University of solved the human problem, it might have worked. Rochester; and Joe Konstan, who comes to us from Related to that, I was remembering a bunch of the Midwest, as our Minneapolis person here on these smart house projects. And I have to admit I the panel. I think everyone Joe Konstan: I was actually surprised when you hates smart spaces. I think of myself at the core there's nobody there, do you warn people and give in human-computer interaction. So I went back them a chance to answer? There's no good answer and started looking at what I knew of artificial to this question. I can tell you if that person is in intelligence to try to see where the path forward bed asleep, the answer is no, don't wake them up was, and I was inspired by the past.
Oct-10-2010
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