Post by account_disabled on Jan 4, 2018 11:13:44 GMT
Hi,
The US government has set up a research center called BRAIN (the Brain Research through Advancing Innovative Neurotechnology initiative), and they’re investing astronomical sums. Elon Musk, the founder of Tesla, invented Neuralink to create a connection between human brains and computers: in other words, the goal is to actually download our brains. McKinsey estimates that in 2015, investments in Artificial Intelligence (AI) ranged from 20 to 30 billion dollars. AI experts (who are still very few, and earning ridiculous amounts of money) agree that by 2030 we’ll see what’s called a technological singularity, which marks the moment in time when machine intelligence will surpass human intelligence.
How is that possible? The human brain contains around 100 billion neuron with 100 trillion chemical and electronic connections. Put those connections to work and do the math: the human brain is still the most complex machine on the planet. So the realization that in a decade’s time AI will exceed human intelligence – well, that makes us a little nervous, to say the least.
Have we already lost? What can we do? In this article I’m not laying down the battle lines for a war between humans and machines; that’s a decades-old debate. Instead I want to point out a way that we can move from an obsolete paradigm of learning to a different one, both at an individual level and in our society as a whole. In other words, with AI, Machine Learning, the ability of computers to learn without being programmed, Deep Learning, and science that’s progressing faster than ever, we humans have to rethink what it means to learn.
Please help.
Thanks!
I didn't find the right solution from the Internet.
References:
www.weforum.org/agenda/2017/10/what-the-machine-age-means-for-the-way-you-learn/
3D Medical animated video
The US government has set up a research center called BRAIN (the Brain Research through Advancing Innovative Neurotechnology initiative), and they’re investing astronomical sums. Elon Musk, the founder of Tesla, invented Neuralink to create a connection between human brains and computers: in other words, the goal is to actually download our brains. McKinsey estimates that in 2015, investments in Artificial Intelligence (AI) ranged from 20 to 30 billion dollars. AI experts (who are still very few, and earning ridiculous amounts of money) agree that by 2030 we’ll see what’s called a technological singularity, which marks the moment in time when machine intelligence will surpass human intelligence.
How is that possible? The human brain contains around 100 billion neuron with 100 trillion chemical and electronic connections. Put those connections to work and do the math: the human brain is still the most complex machine on the planet. So the realization that in a decade’s time AI will exceed human intelligence – well, that makes us a little nervous, to say the least.
Have we already lost? What can we do? In this article I’m not laying down the battle lines for a war between humans and machines; that’s a decades-old debate. Instead I want to point out a way that we can move from an obsolete paradigm of learning to a different one, both at an individual level and in our society as a whole. In other words, with AI, Machine Learning, the ability of computers to learn without being programmed, Deep Learning, and science that’s progressing faster than ever, we humans have to rethink what it means to learn.
Please help.
Thanks!
I didn't find the right solution from the Internet.
References:
www.weforum.org/agenda/2017/10/what-the-machine-age-means-for-the-way-you-learn/
3D Medical animated video