Anonymous ID: 2420b0 Oct. 25, 2021, 8:33 a.m. No.14854370   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun   >>4394 >>4412 >>4422 >>4517 >>4558 >>4663 >>4767

>>14854256

>>14854203

>>14854211

 

notable

https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/human-augmentation-the-dawn-of-a-new-paradigm

 

Details

The Development, Concepts and Doctrine Centre (DCDC) has worked in partnership with the German Bundeswehr Office for Defence Planning to understand the future implications of human augmentation (HA), setting the foundation for more detailed Defence research and development.

 

The project incorporates research from German, Swedish, Finnish and UK Defence specialists to understand how emerging technologies such as genetic engineering, bioinformatics and the possibility of brain-computer interfaces could affect the future of society, security and Defence. The ethical, moral and legal challenges are complex and must be thoroughly considered, but HA could signal the coming of a new era of strategic advantage with possible implications across the force development spectrum.

 

HA technologies provides a broad sense of opportunities for today and in the future. There are mature technologies that could be integrated today with manageable policy considerations, such as personalised nutrition, wearables and exoskeletons. There are other technologies in the future with promises of bigger potential such as genetic engineering and brain-computer interfaces. The ethical, moral and legal implications of HA are hard to foresee but early and regular engagement with these issues lie at the heart of success.

 

HA will become increasingly relevant in the future because it is the binding agent between the unique skills of humans and machines. The winners of future wars will not be those with the most advanced technology, but those who can most effectively integrate the unique skills of both human and machine.

 

The growing significance of human-machine teaming is already widely acknowledged but this has so far been discussed from a technology-centric perspective. This HA project represents the missing part of the puzzle.

 

From:

Ministry of Defence

Published

13 May 2021

 

110pgs

Anonymous ID: 2420b0 Oct. 25, 2021, 8:59 a.m. No.14854517   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun   >>4523 >>4527 >>4533 >>4542 >>4558 >>4663 >>4767

>>14854422

>>14854370

>>14854394

 

https://ec.europa.eu/futurium/en/content/human-machine-symbiosis.html

 

from European Commission (an arm of the EU) 19 May 2016

 

Human Machine Symbiosis

 

The big picture

 

New forms of machine-human-symbiosis emerge on all levels and across types of activities. Aspects range from automation in all spheres of human activities to augmentation of intimate functions within the human body.

 

The OBSERVE Screening brought up the following elements:

 

Algorithm responsibilities

 

More and more decisions and activities are done by algorithms and machines (hiring, investment, robo-journalism, poetry, recognition and reproduction of facial expressions, identification). Deep learning further extends the range and depth of human machine interactions.

 

Modelling the human

 

Technical abilities increasingly allow artificial imitation of the human body or behaviour. These imitations are used for testing human related artefacts. Developments include: Artificial/3D printed skin, chips that mimic human organs, real looking animated human flesh or artificial nerve cells.

 

Automation

 

Automation is fast progressing in ever more domains of human activity (medical re-search; sewing, software managing processes, trash collection, drone ships, automated hiring; automatic ordering/replenishment; robo journalism; science). This comes with a number of social, economic and ecological consequences. Humanity needs to understand and actively shape this development e.g. by controlling the power of algorithms and learning to deal with unexpected events. One of the key challenges will be to build a workable future for all.

 

Technological Singularity

 

The technological singularity is a hypothetical event in which artificial general intelli-gence would be capable of recursive self-improvement and thereby ultimately surpass human control or understanding. This expectation has long been voiced in Science Fiction but is also expected and discussed by several researchers. More and more such as physicist Stephen Hawking warn that the development of full artificial intelligence could spell the end of the human race. FET proposals point out that groundwork in fields like ontologies, knowledge representation, computational linguistics and cognitive systems is still necessary.

 

pt1

 

notable

Anonymous ID: 2420b0 Oct. 25, 2021, 9 a.m. No.14854523   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun   >>4527 >>4533 >>4542 >>4558 >>4663 >>4767

>>14854517

Human enhancement

 

Various technologies, techniques and drugs are emerging, that can enhance bodily functions and in particular cognitive performance (neuroenhancement). There are mi-crochip implants, smart contact lenses which can monitor blood values or advanced prosthetic technologies (bionic eyes, extreme kneesโ€ฆ). Severable applications serve to support blind and deaf people to navigate. Biohackers modify themselves with RFID-Chips or other technologies. Science fiction writers envision even more extreme forms by envisaging such as chips that can set emotional mind states or interact with body cells e.g. fighting cancer cells. Also artworks like โ€œAnkeโ€ (Hans Op de Beeck): investi-gate the theme of the enhanced superhuman and the quest for immortality. This trend (in particular cognitive enhancement) could change the way we work, we think or how we communicate.

 

Brain interfaces and implants

 

There is a lot of current R&D effort at the intersection of neuroscience, biotechnology, and computer science directed at developing interfaces to the brain. The topic was one of the most prevalent in the webmining. Examples for research activities on interfaces are memory chips to improve the memory performance, brain controlled bionic devices and a brain reading technology that helps violinists to play again after a heavy accident. For implants new developments in 2015 included soft devices to deliver drugs in the brain and syringe-injectable electronics.

 

Robot reasoning

 

A new generation of robots with cognitive planning and reasoning capabilities is being developed. They can handle uncertainty, act in messy unpredictable situations and carry out creative tasks like participating in a cartoon contest. Furthermore some re-searchers focus on a kind of artificial consciousness and self awareness - a concept that is highly contested by some philosophers.

 

Virtual Personal Assistant Bots

 

Deep machine learning gives rise to a spectrum of smart machine implementations โ€” including robots, autonomous vehicles, virtual personal assistants (VPAs) and smart advisors โ€” that act in an autonomous (or at least semiautonomous) manner. Apps as virtual assistant such as Microsofts Cortana, Google Now or Apples Siri will get better in recognizing situations and derive individual user needs.

 

Fully autonomous production organism

 

If industry 4.0 becomes bigger and more connected, this could mean the end for industrial production as we know it. In science fiction it is envisaged that all production is accomplished by an artificial organism that works fully autonomously.

 

Rise of the drones

 

Science fiction novels envision a world where drones of all shapes and sizes will take over a vast diversity of functions such as monitoring, scanning, surveying, transport and spying. Smarter and smaller drones with more functions are one of the most popular areas on Kickstarter.

 

Robots will become more human-like as their vocabulary comes closer to that of real humans

 

pt 2

Anonymous ID: 2420b0 Oct. 25, 2021, 9 a.m. No.14854527   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun   >>4533 >>4542 >>4558 >>4663 >>4767

>>14854517

>>14854523

 

Currently, computational intelligence is restricted to lexical descriptions found in dic-tionaries. Several FET projects however argue that with current results from brain research from clinical studies and neuro-imaging, a complete inventory of words, their emotional valence and perceptual properties will become available. However, it takes a combined effort of neuroscientists, cognitive scientists, lexicographers and computer scientists to harness this new source.

 

Cognitive overburden through perpetual evaluation

 

Much of today's software casts the user in a role of perpetual evaluation from which itโ€™s relatively easy to escape (with one or two clicks) but impossible to reject all together. This may be a taste of what seems likely to become a potentially overwhelming routine feature of daily life in the near future. Each individual act of evaluation is trivial but the aggregative cognitive burden likely isnโ€™t.

 

The human brain in the digital society

 

Researchers reflect on the question how the digitalisation of society affects the human brain. As an example some speculate that autistic behaviour patterns may be becoming more prevalent in the digital society

 

Insights from cognition research and biology may enable better Ambient Intelligence (AmI) systems

 

Context awareness and activity recognition are key components of the vision of Ambi-ent Intelligence (AmI). A common problem is that activity recognition can only be achieved in narrowly defined sensor configurations. Bringing together insights from biology, machine learning and control theory will allow new systems which take advan-tage of sensing modalities that happen to be available, rather than forcing the user to deploy specific, application dependent sensor systems.

 

Implants that store and transfer data

 

Prosthetics or implants which store, process and transfer data in many ways emerge in science fiction. These implants could be interconnected and also linked with a global net. In this scenario complete surveillance could be permanent.

 

Optical implants

 

Ideas about optical implants emerge in science-fiction. Nerve cell-prosthetics which translate a digital optical input in biological data or implants which replaces organs are thinkable. Furthermore there could be laser-implants transmitting additive information direct to the visual nerve via a laser-stimulus.

 

Automated indoor farming

 

A company in Japan is building an indoor lettuce farm that will be completely tended by robots and computers. The company expects the factory to open in 2017, and the fully automated farming process could make the lettuce cheaper and better for the environ-ment. For now, the Wall Street Journal reports that the company is still working on a machine that can plant the seeds, and their process still requires human eyes to determine whether a seedling has sprouted.

 

The work needed

 

Emergence of new forms of human machine symbiosis clearly carries substantial potential for benefiting humanity. At the same time several sources point to severe threats. Collaborative and inter-disciplinary research is required to reap the benefits, prevent failures and chaos and to counteract risks. Issues like trust and responsibility in hybrid human-machine ensembles need to be explored on all levels.

 

pt 3

Anonymous ID: 2420b0 Oct. 25, 2021, 9:01 a.m. No.14854533   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun   >>4542 >>4558 >>4663 >>4767

>>14854527

>>14854517

>>14854523

 

sauces

 

Selected voices

 

http://www.nature.com/news/intelligent-robots-must-uphold-human-rights-1.17167

 

http://www.iftf.org/future-now/article-detail/from-20forecasts-an-algorithm-arms-race-risks-a-sorcerers-apprentice-scenario/

 

http://www.iftf.org/our-work/people-technology/technology-horizons/human-machine-futures/

 

http://discoversociety.org/2015/07/28/big-data-predictive-machines-and-security-enthusiasts-critics-and-sceptics/?utm_content=bufferb88c5&utm_medium=social&utm_source=twitter.com&utm_campaign=buffer

 

http://www.deepstuff.org/prototype-robotic-system-emotion-memory/

 

http://www.bbc.com/future/story/20150715-how-robots-mess-with-our-minds?ocid=twfut

 

http://www.deepstuff.org/the-good-the-bad-and-the-robot-experts-are-trying-to-make-machines-be-moral/

 

http://www.bbc.com/future/story/20150812-how-to-tell-a-good-robot-from-the-bad?ocid=twfut

 

http://motherboard.vice.com/read/the-icelandic-institute-for-intelligent-machines-now-has-a-unique-ethics-policy?utm_source=mbtwitter

 

http://motherboard.vice.com/read/this-ai-creates-interactive-fiction-by-reading-other-peoples-stories

 

http://motherboard.vice.com/read/we-need-to-control-our-algorithms-before-they-destroy-the-environment?utm_source=mbtwitter

 

http://www.nytimes.com/2015/06/26/upshot/can-an-algorithm-hire-better-than-a-human.html?ref=technology&abt=0002&abg=1&_r=1

 

http://www.theverge.com/2015/8/12/9136663/telefonica-open-future-startup-algorithm?utm_campaign=theverge&utm_content=chorus&utm_medium=social&utm_source=twitter

 

http://www.theawl.com/2014/03/robopoetics-the-complete-operators-manual

 

http://www.technologyreview.com/news/538601/inside-amazons-warehouse-human-robot-symbiosis/?utm_content=buffer4817a&utm_medium=social&utm_source=twitter.com&utm_campaign=buffer

 

http://thechanger.org/community/ethics-algorithms-why-should-we-care

 

https://www.technologyreview.com/s/539781/teach-your-robot-to-do-the-dishes/