Inside DARPA's effort to create explainable artificial intelligence
Since its founding, the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) has been a hub of innovation. While created as the research arm of the Department of Defense, DARPA has played an important role in some of the technologies that have become (or will become) fundamental to modern human societies. In the 1960s and 1970s, DARPA (then known as ARPA), created ARPANET, the computer network that became the precursor to the internet. In 2003, DARP launched CALO, a project that ushered in the era of Siri and other voice-enabled assistants. In 2004, DARPA launched the Grand Challenge, a competition that set the stage for current developments and advances in self-driving cars. In 2013, DARPA launched the Brain Initiative, an ambitious project that brings together universities, tech companies and neuroscientists to discover how the brain works and develop technologies that enable the human brain to interact with the digital world. Among DARPA's many exciting projects is Explainable Artificial Intelligence (XAI), an initiative launched in 2016 aimed at solving one of the principal challenges of deep learning and neural networks, the subset of AI that is becoming increasing prominent in many different sectors.
Jan-25-2019, 03:09:35 GMT