1st Edition

Superhuman Beyond the Limits of Our Intelligence

By Nello Cristianini Copyright 2027
128 Pages 3 B/W Illustrations
by CRC Press

128 Pages 3 B/W Illustrations
by CRC Press

The question driving Artificial Intelligence research has shifted. No longer do we ask whether machines can be intelligent, but whether they can match us, or surpass us entirely. And with that question returns an older, deeper fear: the fear of being surpassed.  superhuman (adj.) That which transcends the possibilities and limits of human nature. transcend (v.) To exceed or go beyond... Read more
Prologue I. Artificial Narrow Intelligence – ANI 1. The day after 2. The first overtaking 3. Beyond the experts 4. The next challenge II. Artificial General Intelligence – AGI 5. How to measure a mind 6. Measuring machine intelligence 7. The tests never end 8. AGI on the horizon 9. Two ways of thinking, two paths to follow? 10. The Scaling Hypothesis 11. Reasoning one step at a time 12. Reluctance and vertigo III. Artificial Super Intelligence – ASI 13. The final challenge: super Artificial Intelligence? 14. Beating ourselves at our own game 15. Beyond the limits of our intelligence 16. The final test for humanity Epilogue Informal glossary Bibliography

Biography

Nello Cristianini has been an influential researcher in the field of machine learning and AI for over 20 years. He is Professor of Artificial Intelligence at the University of Bath, before that he has worked at the University of Bristol, the University of California (Davis), the University of London (Royal Holloway). For his work in machine learning, he has been a past recipient of the Royal Society Wolfson Research Merit Award, and of the ERC Advanced Grant. Cristianini has been the co-author of influential books in machine learning, as well as dozens of academic articles, published in journals that range from AI to the philosophy of science, from the digital humanities to natural language processing, and from sociology to biology. In 2017, he delivered the annual STOA lecture at the European Parliament on the topic of the social impact of AI, a theme that he is still actively investigating. Cristianini has a degree in Physics from the University of Trieste, an MSc in Computational Intelligence from the University of London, and a PhD from the University of Bristol.