How Not To Destroy the World With AI - Stuart Russell
Dominic Hopkins
Enthusiastic about Policy Design, International Trade, Charity Partnerships & Prospect Generation.
It is reasonable to expect that artificial intelligence (AI) capabilities will eventually exceed those of humans across a range of real-world decision-making scenarios. Should this be a cause for concern, as Alan Turing ( The Alan Turing Institute ) and others have suggested? Will we lose control over our future? Or will AI complement and augment human intelligence in beneficial ways? It turns out that both views are correct, but they are talking about completely different forms of AI. To achieve the positive outcome, a fundamental reorientation of the field is required. Instead of building systems that optimize arbitrary objectives, we need to learn how to build systems that will, in fact, be beneficial for us. Russell will argue that this is possible as well as necessary. The new approach to AI opens up many avenues for research and brings into sharp focus several questions at the foundations of moral philosophy.
About Speaker:
Stuart Russell, OBE, is a professor of computer science at the University of California, Berkeley, and an honorary fellow of Wadham College at the 英国牛津大学 . He is a leading researcher in #artificialintelligence and the author, with Peter Norvig, of “Artificial Intelligence: A Modern Approach,” the standard text in the field. He has been active in arms control for nuclear and autonomous weapons. His latest book, “Human Compatible,” addresses the long-term impact of AI on humanity.
About the Series:
The CITRIS Research Exchange and Berkeley Artificial Intelligence Research Lab (BAIR) 美国加州大学伯克利分校 present a distinguished speaker series exploring the recent breakthroughs of #AI , its broader societal implications and its future potential.