COMPUTER WIL HAVE EMOTIONAL INTELLIGENCE BY 2029
Google's
director of engineering and futurist in chief claims the search giant is
on its way to developing search engines that understand and interpret
human logic and feelings.
In an interview with Wired, Ray Kurzweil, whose mission at Google is "to develop natural language
understanding," explains that the company is making strides towards
understanding complex natural language and with it the ability to move
well beyond recognizing keywords and onto understanding the emotional
and intelligent content of web pages and of users' search requests.
"Search has moved beyond just finding keywords, but it still doesn't
read all these billions of web pages and book pages for semantic
content. If you write a blog post, you've got something to say, you're
not just creating words and synonyms. We'd like the computers to
actually pick up on that semantic meaning. If that happens, and I
believe that it's feasible, people could ask more complex questions," he
says.
In the interview, he also reveals that he has a target for achieving
that vision by 2029. "I've had a consistent date of 2029 for that
vision. And that doesn't just mean logical intelligence. It means
emotional intelligence, being funny, getting the joke, being sexy, being
loving, understanding human emotion. That's actually the most complex
thing we do. That is what separates computers and humans today. I
believe that gap will close by 2029."
Achieving this level of complex, natural language understanding is
essentially a form of artificial intelligence and Kurzweil points to the
fact that gaining a greater understanding of how the human brain
functions -- how it creates and classifies thoughts -- is helping to
drive progress as computer learning and thinking can be programmed to
copy the human mind's methods. "Using these biologically inspired
models, plus all of the research that's been done over the decades in
artificial intelligence, combined with exponentially expanding hardware,
we will achieve human levels within two decades," he says.
Winner of the National Medal of Technology and Innovation, (America's
highest technology honour) and a pioneer in optical character
recognition, text to speech and speech recognition, Kurzweil is
recognized as one of the world's leading futurists. He joined Google in
2012.
No comments:
Post a Comment