Future of the Artificial Mind

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A01=Alessio Plebe
A01=Pietro Perconti
accountability in intelligent systems
AI Community
Animal Kingdom
artificial intelligence ethics
Author_Alessio Plebe
Author_Pietro Perconti
Bayesian Networks
Betti Numbers
Category=UYQ
cognition
cognitive systems theory
Early Cognitive Science
Elman's Neural Recurrent Network
eq_bestseller
eq_computing
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Feedforward Networks
Genetic Algorithms
Hidden Layer
human machine interaction
Humanoid Robots
Intentional Stance
knowledge
Logic Theory Machine
machine learning
mind
neural computation models
Past Tense
PDP Model
philosophical frameworks ai
Port Authority Bus Terminal
RBM
Renormalization Group
Rewriting Rule
robotics
robots
SAE International
social robotics research
Stop Killer Robots
Terminal Elements
Turing Machine
Turing Test
Universal Turing Machine
Von Der Malsburg

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367638269
  • Weight: 620g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 09 Jun 2022
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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The Future of the Artificial Mind is about the social and technological challenges posed by the new wave of artificial intelligence, both from a technical and a cognitive perspective. Deep neural networks have brought about tremendous technological improvements. This renaissance in artificial intelligence, after decades of stagnation, has enabled new technologies capable of surpassing human performance, as in the case of visual recognition.

The book reviews the key ideas that have enabled these goals to be achieved and their historical origins. The book also considers some of the ethical and social challenges that the future development of artificial intelligence will face. Will humans fall in love with future android dolls? What will artificial sex be like? And what will it be like to travel in cars that will treat us as passengers instead of drivers? But predicting the future appears more magic than science. But when it comes to artificial intelligence, it is a constant temptation. Since it is well known that "the only way to get rid of a temptation is to enjoy it!", the hypothesis considered in the last chapter is that emerging trends point to a near future in which intelligence will be ubiquitous, but it will be difficult to identify its bearer. We may be heading towards an era of widespread intelligence, but an intelligence without accountability.

Alessio Plebe received a degree in Electronic Engineering in 1981 from the University of Rome and a PhD degree in Philosophy of Language from the University of Palermo in 2004. He is Full Professor in Philosophy of Science at the Department of Cognitive Science of the University of Messina. His main research areas are neural computation, its epistemology, and its explanatory power for several cognitive functions. He has developed realistic neural models of visual object recognition, early language acquisition, and moral behaviour. Currently, he is researching the rise of deep learning, its causes and its impact on philosophy and cognitive science.

Pietro Perconti is Full Professor of Philosophy of Mind at the University of Messina, Italy, where he is also head of the Department of Cognitive Science. Perconti studied philosophy at the Universities of Palermo and Berlin (Freie Universität) and received a PhD in Philosophy of Language from the University of Palermo in 1996. His first book is devoted to history of ideas (Kantian Linguistics, 1999). Now his main research fields are social cognition, consciousness, and the social role of cognitive science.

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