Thoughts on the Matrix and Man vs. Machine? Jeopardy has an interesting experiment going on.....
Basically - IBM built a super computer that is facing off against 2 of Jeopardy's best human contestants (the man, Ken Jennings, being one of them). So far, the computer is kicking the humans' ass.
What's interesting is that it's not something like Chess, which has a finite set of rules. There's tons of wordplay/riddles involved with Jeopardy, which is what computers normally aren't that good at.
http://www.vancouversun.com/entertainme ... story.htmlQuote:
according to IBM, Watson, which has been loaded with more than 200 million pages of data, analyzes clues in many different ways using its 100-plus algorithms. This gives it more than 100 possible solutions, and it then assigns a probability to each solution. If many algorithms suggest the same solution, the probability of that solution increases, and if the probability is high enough, Watson will give its answer.
Watson therefore displays no consciousness, and many computer scientists have suggested that it isn't even displaying thought or intelligence, but is merely simulating them. But this, of course, depends on what we mean by "thought" and "intelligence." So far, cognitive psychologists haven't been particularly successful in explaining how humans think, with some pessimists suggesting it is an insoluble problem -and this, in turn, has hobbled research on artificial intelligence.
What exactly is "intelligence."?
Also, on a related note - Watson missed a really easy final jeopardy question last night. The category was U.S. Cities and the question was:
"Its largest airport was named for a World War II hero; its second largest, for a World War II battle."
Clearly the answer was Chicago (O'Hare, Midway), as the two humans got correct. Watson guessed Toronto lol.
Article about how it missed the question:
http://asmarterplanet.com/blog/2011/02/ ... -clue.html