Anonymous ID: e85f46 Feb. 16, 2023, 1:07 p.m. No.18360045   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0120

>>18359421

>Who controls the future, controls the present?

 

an aTEMPT[ing] A.I. LookingLASS is trying too:

 

A.l.i[c]-e / AlycSay / e-LIE-sa / a-Li[c]e / a.i. therapist

 

_lb

>>18359354, >>18359378

How to Make a Robot Use Theory of Mind{ Be aware of false prophets. https://qalerts.app/?n=4964 }

Researchers give AI the ability to simulate the anticipated needs and actions of others

By Chris Baraniuk on August 17, 2018

 

“I build robots that have simulations of themselves and other robots inside themselves,” Winfield says.

 

“The idea of putting a simulation inside a robot… is a really neat way of allowing it to actually predict the future.”

 

“Theory of mind” is the term philosophers and psychologists use for the ability to predict the actions of self and

others by imagining ourselves in the position of something or someone else.

 

Winfield thinks enabling robots to do this will help them infer the goals and desires of agents around them

— like realizing that the running couple really wanted to get that elevator.

https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/how-to-make-a-robot-use-theory-of-mind/

https://archive.ph/r9a0H

 

Alan Winfield, professor of robot ethics at the University of West England in Bristol

https://archive.ph/QSA6G

 

So, Umm, Google Duplex’s Chatter Is Not Quite Human

A systems scientist breaks down the intricacies of making a machine that can fool humans into thinking it’s one of us

By Larry Greenemeier on May 17, 2018

 

https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/so-umm-google-duplexs-chatter-is-not-quite-human/

https://archive.ph/RFM5w

 

https://twitter.com/lggreenemeier

https://archive.ph/l5dGm