The machine that wanted to be a mind

By Rupert Goodwins
24 January 2001 12:14 PM
Tags: robotics, ai, neuron, consciousness, brain, quantum, weak, machine

Strong AI vs weak AI

There are now two sorts of AI: strong AI, which is the business of making computers think, and weak AI, which has computers modelling some aspects of human behaviour. Marketing people love weak AI -- if you see a product described as having artificial intelligence or being 'smart', the chances are that it's got some aspect of weak AI in it.

Weak AI has the enormous benefit that it can be described. There are a load of approaches, techniques and tools that have evolved. Knowledge engineering -- where information about something is codified and put into a database -- is of great commercial value, even if it has moved well away from its cognitive beginnings.

Fuzzy logic, visual recognition, natural language processing and other ways of dealing with real-world data all have their roots in AI while paying back some of the research investment in other fields -- the paperclip in Microsoft Office uses a strand of weak AI called Bayesian belief networks, while the grammar checker comes from AI language research. Yet while all these model part of what we know about our capabilities as sentient beings, none seem close to providing true sentience. Whatever that is.

Some philosophers think that mind is impossible to model: John Searle of the Philosophy Department at Berkeley has proposed this with his Chinese Room analogy.

Take a room with two slots in the wall, an English-speaking man inside and a rulebook. The rulebook tells him how to deal with Chinese sentences that are pushed through the slot -- how to choose characters with which to reply, and what order to send them back out through the second slot. The responses may be perfect Chinese, but it does not logically follow on that the man is actually understanding the language as a native speaker would, rather than merely processing it.

Thus, says Searle, any machine with a programmed set of responses cannot be considered intelligent. Unsurprisingly, this is not a popular position among cognitive scientists, but the fact that such a consideration still has currency shows that the AI as a field is a long way from being as established as physics.

Less drastically, many researchers, such as James Hendler of the University of Maryland, say that whatever machine consciousness is created is unlikely to be like ours. "Is your cat aware?" asks Hendler, pointing out that it undoubtedly is in some ways, but not in others.

A lot of AI research is dogged by the feeling that if something is intelligent, it should be in some way like us. Alan Turing's test for conversational skills in a computer has been the subject of some high profile prizes and much research but consistently produces results that, even when carefully limited according to subject matter and style, would make a toddler chuckle.

On the other hand, a program like Eliza, which makes no claims towards intelligence but merely reiterates what the user types, can easily fool some people for some time into thinking they're talking to a human. Nevertheless, there is no alternative starting point for AI other than ourselves.

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