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... and Newell11, two of the founders of the field of artificial intelligence, wrote, ‘…there are now in the world machines that think, that learn and that create. Moreover, their ability to do these things is going to increase rapidly until – in a visible future – the range of problems they can handle ...
... and Newell11, two of the founders of the field of artificial intelligence, wrote, ‘…there are now in the world machines that think, that learn and that create. Moreover, their ability to do these things is going to increase rapidly until – in a visible future – the range of problems they can handle ...
Alan Turing “Founder of computer science” Prof. Jonathan P. Bowen www.jpbowen.com
... • Newman’s 1935 lectures on the foundations of mathematics inspired Turing • Later at Bletchley Park / Manchester • One of Turing’s few co-authors Newman, M. H. A. (1955). “Alan Mathison Turing. 1912–1954”. Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society, 1:253–226. doi:10.1098/rsbm.1955.0019 ...
... • Newman’s 1935 lectures on the foundations of mathematics inspired Turing • Later at Bletchley Park / Manchester • One of Turing’s few co-authors Newman, M. H. A. (1955). “Alan Mathison Turing. 1912–1954”. Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society, 1:253–226. doi:10.1098/rsbm.1955.0019 ...
Could a machine think? - Alan M. Turing vs. John R. Searle
... fiction. Real human computers just remember what they have got to do. If one wants to make a digital computer mimic the behaviour of the human computer in some operation, one has to ask him how it is done and then translate the answer into the form of an instruction table (state-transition diagram). ...
... fiction. Real human computers just remember what they have got to do. If one wants to make a digital computer mimic the behaviour of the human computer in some operation, one has to ask him how it is done and then translate the answer into the form of an instruction table (state-transition diagram). ...
Can Machines Think - New York University
... programmable computers in use today are in essence Turing machines. Over thirty years ago, at the dawn of the computer age, Turing began a classic article, “Computing Machinery and Intelligence” with the words: “I propose to consider the question, ‘Can machines think?’”--but then went on to say this ...
... programmable computers in use today are in essence Turing machines. Over thirty years ago, at the dawn of the computer age, Turing began a classic article, “Computing Machinery and Intelligence” with the words: “I propose to consider the question, ‘Can machines think?’”--but then went on to say this ...
AI Armageddon and the Three Laws of Robotics
... brought it to life by putting a shem (a tablet with a Hebrew inscription) in its mouth. The golem eventually went awry, and Rabbi Loew had to destroy it by removing the shem. What has been brought to life here, so to speak, is the almost religious notion that there are some things that only God shou ...
... brought it to life by putting a shem (a tablet with a Hebrew inscription) in its mouth. The golem eventually went awry, and Rabbi Loew had to destroy it by removing the shem. What has been brought to life here, so to speak, is the almost religious notion that there are some things that only God shou ...
turing
... (hence the candidates are out of sight). This sets the stage for what will be Turing's real object of comparison, which is a thinking human being versus a (nonthinking) machine, a comparison that is to be unbiased by appearance. Turing's criteria, as we all know by now, will turn out to be two (thou ...
... (hence the candidates are out of sight). This sets the stage for what will be Turing's real object of comparison, which is a thinking human being versus a (nonthinking) machine, a comparison that is to be unbiased by appearance. Turing's criteria, as we all know by now, will turn out to be two (thou ...
Communications of the ACM
... of autonomous and adaptive machines is an open problem. Industrial robots are an example of autonomous yet nonadaptive machines: they execute the same sequence of actions repeatedly. Conversely, unmanned drones are an example of adaptive yet non-autonomous machines: they exhibit the adaptive capabil ...
... of autonomous and adaptive machines is an open problem. Industrial robots are an example of autonomous yet nonadaptive machines: they execute the same sequence of actions repeatedly. Conversely, unmanned drones are an example of adaptive yet non-autonomous machines: they exhibit the adaptive capabil ...
Title Social robotics - Research Repository UCD
... Aengus, Bodan and Bui are ancient characters in Irish legend and their graves can be found at Bru na Boinne, Ireland. ...
... Aengus, Bodan and Bui are ancient characters in Irish legend and their graves can be found at Bru na Boinne, Ireland. ...
Anthropomorphism and the social robot
... a machine could think, Alan Turing came up in 1950 with what has become well known as the Turing Test [9]. The test is based on whether a machine could trick a person into believing they were chatting with another person via computer or at least not be sure that it was “only” a machine. This approac ...
... a machine could think, Alan Turing came up in 1950 with what has become well known as the Turing Test [9]. The test is based on whether a machine could trick a person into believing they were chatting with another person via computer or at least not be sure that it was “only” a machine. This approac ...
Captcha
... Tester asks questions in text-form Answers are returned in text-form Matthias Neubauer ...
... Tester asks questions in text-form Answers are returned in text-form Matthias Neubauer ...
Impossibles AIBO Four-Legged Team Description Paper
... made decision on continuing their research objectives through AIBO 4-legged League. AIBO League was preferred over the other RoboCup Leagues because of the following four reasons which are also considered as “Impossibles” objectives in AIBO league. AIBO does support the real world challenges, wherea ...
... made decision on continuing their research objectives through AIBO 4-legged League. AIBO League was preferred over the other RoboCup Leagues because of the following four reasons which are also considered as “Impossibles” objectives in AIBO league. AIBO does support the real world challenges, wherea ...
30200385.pdf
... such an environment. The potential field methodology of MAPS is preferred over state based approaches in highly dynamic and competitive environments. The two inherent drawback effects of using potential fields, minima and oscillations, are not persistent due to the dynamic nature of the environment. ...
... such an environment. The potential field methodology of MAPS is preferred over state based approaches in highly dynamic and competitive environments. The two inherent drawback effects of using potential fields, minima and oscillations, are not persistent due to the dynamic nature of the environment. ...
Soarian™ User Interface
... • The technology to support how a robot can make eye contact is comparatively simple • Evaluating how the person is affected by the robot’s gaze and behavior is difficult. • Does the person get bored or frustrated? • Does the user consider the robot helpful and effective? • Is the robot trusted to p ...
... • The technology to support how a robot can make eye contact is comparatively simple • Evaluating how the person is affected by the robot’s gaze and behavior is difficult. • Does the person get bored or frustrated? • Does the user consider the robot helpful and effective? • Is the robot trusted to p ...
The Triangle of Life
... Notably Lund (2003) describes the “Building Brains and Bodies approach” and demonstrates the co-evolution of a Lego robot body and its controller in which the evolved robot is physically constructed and tested. Here simulated evolution explores a robot body space with 3 different wheel types, 25 pos ...
... Notably Lund (2003) describes the “Building Brains and Bodies approach” and demonstrates the co-evolution of a Lego robot body and its controller in which the evolved robot is physically constructed and tested. Here simulated evolution explores a robot body space with 3 different wheel types, 25 pos ...
Anthropomorphism: Opportunities and Challenges
... Int J of Soc Robotics (2015) 7:347–360 DOI 10.1007/s12369-014-0267-6 ...
... Int J of Soc Robotics (2015) 7:347–360 DOI 10.1007/s12369-014-0267-6 ...
The Turing Test
... “chatterbot” programs whose sole goal is to fool the judges (Shieber 1994ab; for Loebner’s reply, see Loebner 1994). Turning the tables, some recent projects have used computers as “interrogators” in a Turing-like test to unmask computer programs that attempt to convince other computer programs that ...
... “chatterbot” programs whose sole goal is to fool the judges (Shieber 1994ab; for Loebner’s reply, see Loebner 1994). Turning the tables, some recent projects have used computers as “interrogators” in a Turing-like test to unmask computer programs that attempt to convince other computer programs that ...
systems
... Describe the current state, the goal state, and the difference between the two. Use the difference between the current state and goal state, possibly with the description of the current state or goal state, to select a promising procedure. Use the promising procedure and update the current sta ...
... Describe the current state, the goal state, and the difference between the two. Use the difference between the current state and goal state, possibly with the description of the current state or goal state, to select a promising procedure. Use the promising procedure and update the current sta ...
Soarian™ User Interface
... • Differences in interaction between anthropomorphic and non-anthropomorphic robots • Children with autism respond to simple mobile car-like robots as well as to humanoid machines. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lZSDnvOoX84 • Some studies find that humanoid robots are overwhelming and intimidating • ...
... • Differences in interaction between anthropomorphic and non-anthropomorphic robots • Children with autism respond to simple mobile car-like robots as well as to humanoid machines. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lZSDnvOoX84 • Some studies find that humanoid robots are overwhelming and intimidating • ...
Turing Centenary
... machines. [cf. Roger Penrose] ⇒ Turing: “Although it is established that there are limitations to the powers of any particular machine, it has only been stated, without any sort of proof, that no such limitations apply to the human intellect.” If we develop an AI, it may very well know truths that h ...
... machines. [cf. Roger Penrose] ⇒ Turing: “Although it is established that there are limitations to the powers of any particular machine, it has only been stated, without any sort of proof, that no such limitations apply to the human intellect.” If we develop an AI, it may very well know truths that h ...
I Agents, Bodies, Constraints, Dynamics, and Evolution Alan K. Mackworth
... What I would like you, the reader, to do is to think of the CSP model as a very simple example of GOFAIR. There are no robots involved, but there are some actions. The solver is placing numbers in the squares and so on. In pure GOFAIR there is a perfect model of the world and its dynamics in the age ...
... What I would like you, the reader, to do is to think of the CSP model as a very simple example of GOFAIR. There are no robots involved, but there are some actions. The solver is placing numbers in the squares and so on. In pure GOFAIR there is a perfect model of the world and its dynamics in the age ...
The Frankenstein Complex and Asimov`s Three Laws
... Asimov believed that his “Three Laws of Robotics” were being taken seriously by robotics researchers of his day and that they would be present in any advanced robots as a matter of course (Asimov 1978; Asimov 1990). In preparation for this writing, a handful of emails were sent out asking current ro ...
... Asimov believed that his “Three Laws of Robotics” were being taken seriously by robotics researchers of his day and that they would be present in any advanced robots as a matter of course (Asimov 1978; Asimov 1990). In preparation for this writing, a handful of emails were sent out asking current ro ...
Artificial Intelligence and Neural Networks The
... computation. Both discussed intensively the problem how the performance of the machines will ultimately compare to the power of the human brain. In this paper I will first review the work of Alan Turing, contained in his seminal paper ”Computing Machinery and Intelligence” (17) and in the not so wel ...
... computation. Both discussed intensively the problem how the performance of the machines will ultimately compare to the power of the human brain. In this paper I will first review the work of Alan Turing, contained in his seminal paper ”Computing Machinery and Intelligence” (17) and in the not so wel ...
An Emotional Mimicking Humanoid Biped Robot and its Quantum
... humanoid robots to acquire complex motor skills is recently advancing at a very fast pace [9]. However, assigning simple emotions like “fear” or “anger” or behaviors like obstacle-avoidance to wheeled mobile robots as in Braitenberg Vehicles or subsumption architecture [35,42,43,53], although very u ...
... humanoid robots to acquire complex motor skills is recently advancing at a very fast pace [9]. However, assigning simple emotions like “fear” or “anger” or behaviors like obstacle-avoidance to wheeled mobile robots as in Braitenberg Vehicles or subsumption architecture [35,42,43,53], although very u ...
Author / Computing, 2000, Vol. 0, Issue 0, 1
... computation. Both discussed intensively the problem how the performance of the machines will ultimately compare to the power of the human brain. In this paper I will first review the work of Alan Turing, contained in his seminal paper "Computing Machinery and Intelligence" [17] and in the not so wel ...
... computation. Both discussed intensively the problem how the performance of the machines will ultimately compare to the power of the human brain. In this paper I will first review the work of Alan Turing, contained in his seminal paper "Computing Machinery and Intelligence" [17] and in the not so wel ...
Kevin Warwick

Kevin Warwick (/ˈwɔrɪk, ˈwɒr-/; born 9 February 1954) is a British engineer and Deputy Vice-Chancellor (Research) at Coventry University in the United Kingdom. He is known for his studies on direct interfaces between computer systems and the human nervous system, and has also done research in the field of robotics.