Professor
Stephen Hawking on Wednesday opened a new artificial intelligence research
centre at Britain's Cambridge University.
The
Leverhulme Centre for the Future of Intelligence (CFI) will delve into AI
applications ranging from increasingly "smart" smartphones to robot
surgeons and "Terminator" style military droids.
Funded
by a £10 million (11.2 million-euro, $12.3-million) grant from the Leverhulme
Trust, the centre's express aim is to ensure AI is used to benefit humanity.
Opening
the new centre, Hawking said it was not possible to predict what might be
achieved with AI.
"Perhaps
with the tools of this new technological revolution, we will be able to undo
some of the damage done to the natural world by the last one --
industrialisation.
"And
surely we will aim to finally eradicate disease and poverty. Every aspect of
our lives will be transformed.
"In
short, success in creating AI could the biggest event in the history of our
civilisation," Hawking said.
The
centre is a collaboration between the universities of Oxford, Cambridge,
Imperial College London, and Berkeley, California.
It will
bring together researchers from multiple disciplines to work with industry
representatives and policymakers on projects ranging from regulation of
autonomous weapons to the implications of AI for democracy.
"AI
is hugely exciting. Its practical applications can help us to tackle important
social problems, as well as easing many tasks in everyday life," said
Margaret Boden, a professor of cognitive sciences and consultant to the CFI.
The
technology has led to major advances in "the sciences of mind and
life", she said, but, misused, also "presents grave dangers".
"CFI
aims to pre-empt these dangers, by guiding AI-development in human-friendly
ways," she added.
Fears of
robots freeing themselves from their creators have inspired a host of films and
literature -- "2001: a Space Odyssey" to name but one.
Hawking
warned technological developments also posed a risk to our civilisation.
"Alongside
the benefits, AI will also bring dangers, like powerful autonomous weapons, or
new ways for the few to oppress the many.
"It
will bring disruption to our economy. And in the future, AI could develop a
will of its own -- a will that is in conflict with ours," he said.
But
catastrophic scenarios aside, the development of AI, which allows robots to
execute almost all human tasks, directly threatens millions of jobs. So will
AI, which has already conquered man in the game of chess, ultimately leave humans
on the sidelines?
"We
don't need to see AI as replacing us, but can see it as enhancing us: we will
be able to make better decisions, on the basis of better evidence and better
insights," said Stephen Cave, director of the centre.
"AI
will help us to learn about ourselves and our environment -- and could, if
managed well, be liberating."
With
this in mind, ethics will be one of the key fields of research of the CFI. "It's
about how to ensure intelligent artificial systems have goals aligned with
human values" and ensure computers don't evolve spontaneously in
"new, unwelcome directions", Cave said.
"Before
we delegate decisions in important areas, we need to be very sure that the
intelligence systems to which we are delegating are sufficiently trustworthy."
Agencies
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