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Home Front: Tech
Boffins create DNA for 'human robots'
2005-02-09
The arrival of intelligent robots that can read, learn and even breed is a step closer as two advanced robotics projects in the US and Korea announced breakthroughs today. The US Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency has awarded $1.2m to two researchers in the Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute to build a computer that can read documents and learn from them. "Humans learn best and most efficiently by reading, and yet the brute fact is that machines, although often touted as learning this and that, cannot read," said Selmer Bringsjord, director of the Rensselaer Artificial Intelligence and Reasoning Laboratory. "Humans do something very special when they read intelligently: they ponder, almost automatically, how their new knowledge might solve future problems they encounter. Our goal is to take appreciable steps toward implementing machine learning at the genuinely human level; an intelligent machine that can read books, comprehend and reflect on what it has read, answer questions in English, and then explain why it answered the way it did."

Meanwhile in South Korea Kim Jong-hwan, professor at Korea's Advanced Institute of Science and Technology, unveiled software which creates 14 artificial chromosomes that he claims gives the code the traits of an individual. The software will be installed on a robot within three months. In tests the chromosomes within the software, which ultimately could allow the robots to 'breed', caused different reactions to external stimuli in different software systems. The code is modelled on human DNA, although as a single not double helix. Kim Jong-hwan has organised a robot football world cup which is used by researchers around the world to test their latest creations.
Posted by:tipper

#2  freaky
Posted by: 2b   2005-02-09 3:52:11 PM  

#1  The next development model is to create a cognitive machine. I suggest the way to do this is to, one-by-one, develop an AI capable of learning the "parameters" of reality, much like an infant would. Things like size, shape, color, environment (ex: day or night), and perspective could fortunately be figured out one at a time, rather than at the same time, at least initially. And then, the robot would need to learn discrimination, that is, how to "ignore" data that it already "knew", and focus on what was new and novel. This *has* to be done to conserve resources.
Posted by: Anonymoose   2005-02-09 11:02:50 AM  

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