A Study on Driverless-Car Ethics Offers a Troubling Look Into Our Values
The first time Azim Shariff met Iyad Rahwan--the first real time, after communicating with him by phone and e-mail--was in a driverless car. It was November, 2012, and Rahwan, a thirty-four-year-old professor of computing and information science, was researching artificial intelligence at the Masdar Institute of Science and Technology, a university in Abu Dhabi. He was eager to explore how concepts within psychology--including social networks and collective reasoning--might inform machine learning, but there were few psychologists working in the U.A.E. Shariff, a thirty-one-year-old with wild hair and expressive eyebrows, was teaching psychology at New York University's campus in Abu Dhabi; he guesses that he was one of four research psychologists in the region at the time, an estimate that Rahwan told me "doesn't sound like an exaggeration." Rahwan cold-e-mailed Shariff and invited him to visit his research group.
Jan-25-2019, 05:05:58 GMT
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