Cooperative AI: machines must learn to find common ground
A huddle at the 2017 United Nations Climate Change Conference, where attendees cooperated on mutually beneficial joint actions on climate.Credit: Sean Gallup/Getty Artificial-intelligence assistants and recommendation algorithms interact with billions of people every day, influencing lives in myriad ways, yet they still have little understanding of humans. Self-driving vehicles controlled by artificial intelligence (AI) are gaining mastery of their interactions with the natural world, but they are still novices when it comes to coordinating with other cars and pedestrians or collaborating with their human operators. The state of AI applications reflects that of the research field. It has long been steeped in a kind of methodological individualism. As is evident from introductory textbooks, the canonical AI problem is that of a solitary machine confronting a non-social environment. Historically, this was a sensible starting point.
May-6-2021, 14:15:08 GMT
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