Events / Human-Compatible Artificial Intelligence
Stuart Russell

Human-Compatible Artificial Intelligence

November 1, 2018
8:00 am - 5:00 pm

Stuart Russell
Professor of Computer Science, UC Berkeley

November 30, 2018
10:40 a.m. -11:45 a.m. – includes Q&A, Discussion
E2 Simularium

Dr. Russell will discuss the implications of new artificial intelligence (AI) technologies, such as the development of autonomous weapons and the replacement of humans in economic roles. He will explore whether AI capabilities can exceed those of humans in real-world decision-making and whether this is cause for concern or if it could benefit humans.

Dr. Russell will appear as a guest lecturer for Dr. David Haussler’s Scientific Principles of Life class. All are welcome.

Abstract
I will briefly survey recent and expected developments in AI and their implications. Some are enormously positive, while others, such as the development of autonomous weapons and the replacement of humans in economic roles, may be negative. Beyond these, one must expect that AI capabilities will eventually exceed those of humans across a range of real-world-decision making scenarios. Should this be a cause for concern, as Elon Musk, Stephen Hawking, and others have suggested? And, if so, what can we do about it? While some in the mainstream AI community dismiss the issue, I will argue that the problem is real and that the technical aspects of it are solvable if we replace current definitions of AI with a version based on provable benefit to humans.

For more, see Dr. Russell’s TED talk