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How to Build Artificial Intelligence We Can Trust


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Exploring the universe with artificial intelligence.

We are relying on artificial intelligence more and more, but it hasnt yet earned our confidence.

Credit: Claire Merchlinsky

Artificial intelligence has a trust problem. We are relying on A.I. more and more, but it hasn't yet earned our confidence.

Tesla cars driving in Autopilot mode, for example, have a troubling history of crashing into stopped vehicles. Amazon's facial recognition system works great much of the time, but when asked to compare the faces of all 535 members of Congress with 25,000 public arrest photos, it found 28 matches, when in reality there were none. A computer program designed to vet job applicants for Amazon was discovered to systematically discriminate against women. Every month new weaknesses in A.I. are uncovered.

The problem is not that today's A.I. needs to get better at what it does. The problem is that today's A.I. needs to try to do something completely different.

In particular, we need to stop building computer systems that merely get better and better at detecting statistical patterns in data sets — often using an approach known as deep learning — and start building computer systems that from the moment of their assembly innately grasp three basic concepts: time, space and causality.

Today's A.I. systems know surprisingly little about any of these concepts. Take the idea of time. We recently searched on Google for "Did George Washington own a computer?" — a query whose answer requires relating two basic facts (when Washington lived, when the computer was invented) in a single temporal framework. None of Google's first 10 search results gave the correct answer. The results didn't even really address the question. The highest-ranked link was to a news story in The Guardian about a computerized portrait of Martha Washington as she might have looked as a young woman.

 

From The New York Times


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