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AI and Common Sense
Details
This book lays out key questions, practical challenges and 'common sense' concerns underlying the incorporation of Common Sense within machine learning algorithms for simulating intelligence, socializing robots, self-driving vehicles, personnel selection, reading, automatic text analysis, and text production.
Common sense is the endless frontier in the development of artificial intelligence, but what exactly is common sense, can we replicate it in algorithmic form, and if we can - should we?Bauer, Schiele and their contributors from a range of disciplines analyse the nature of common sense, and the consequent challenges of incorporating into artificial intelligence models. They look at different ways we might understand common sense and which of these ways are simulated within computer algorithms. These include sensory integration, self-evident truths, rhetorical common places, and mutuality and intentionality of actors within a moral community. How far are these possible features within and of machines? Approaching from a range of perspectives including Sociology, Political Science, Media and Culture, Psychology and Computer Science, the contributors lay out key questions, practical challenges and "common sense" concerns underlying the incorporation of common sense within machine learning algorithms for simulating intelligence, socialising robots, self-driving vehicles, personnel selection, reading, automatic text analysis, and text production.A valuable resource for students and scholars of Science-Technology-Society Studies, Sociologists, Psychologists, Media and Culture Studies, human-computer interaction with an interest in the post-human, and programmers tackling the contextual questions of machine learning.
Autorentext
Martin W. Bauer is Professor of Social Psychology and Research Methodology at the London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE). He investigates "common sense" in relation to science and emerging technologies in the international MACAS (Mapping the Cultural Authority of Science) network. He is a Fellow of the German National Academy of Technical Sciences (acatech). Recent publications include The Psychology of Social Influence: Modes and Modalities of Shifting Common Sense (2021, with Gordon Sammut); Atom, Bytes & Genes: Public Resistance and Techno-scientific Responses (2015).
Bernard Schiele (PhD) is a Professor of Communications in the Faculty of Communication at the University of Québec at Montréal (Canada). He has been working for a number of years on the socio-dissemination of S&T. Among other books he has recently published are Science Communication Today (2015, with Joëlle Le Marec and Patrick Baranger); Communicating Science, A Global Perspective (2020 with Toss Gascoigne and colleagues); Science Culture in a Diverse World: Knowing, Sharing, Caring (2021, with Xuan Liu and Martin Bauer); Le musée dans la société [The Museum in Society] (2021), and Science Communication: Taking a Step Back to Move Forward (2023, with Martin Bauer).
Klappentext
This book lays out key questions, practical challenges and 'common sense' concerns underlying the incorporation of Common Sense within machine learning algorithms for simulating intelligence, socializing robots, self-driving vehicles, personnel selection, reading, automatic text analysis, and text production.
Inhalt
Introductory Comment
When AI meets common sense, frictions will arise
Part 1: The scene and the argument of common sense
AI with common sense: What concept of common sense?
Self-awareness and common sense: The paradox of AI. A dispassionate look
Part 2: Egocentric common sense: AI with additional features
Giving AI some common sense
Human interaction with robots
Towards robots with common sense
Common sense, artificial intelligence and psychology
Part 3: Inter-subjective common sense: public discourse
Giambatistta Vicös dialogical common sense
The a-sociability of AI: Knowledge, social interactions, and the dynamics of common sense
Exploring the common wisdom on artificial intelligence and its political consequences: The case of Germany
Associations of AI and common sense in the news
Meanwhile in Japan: The possibility of Techno-animism for engaging deliberation for emerging technology
Part 4: Unsettling or highlighting common sense?
Common-sense attributions of AI agency: Evidence from an experiment with ChatGPT
The challenges and opportunities in large language models: Navigating the perils of stochastic and scholastic parrots in artificial understanding and common sense
Artificial intelligence in personnel selection: Reactions of researchers, practitioners and applicants
Self-driving vehicles (SDVs) and common sense
Part 5: Conclusion
- AI goes to the movies: Fast, intermediate and slow common sense
Weitere Informationen
- Allgemeine Informationen
- GTIN 09781032626178
- Genre Sociology
- Editor Bauer Martin W., Schiele Bernard
- Sprache Englisch
- Anzahl Seiten 266
- Größe H234mm x B156mm
- Jahr 2024
- EAN 9781032626178
- Format Kartonierter Einband
- ISBN 978-1-03-262617-8
- Veröffentlichung 28.06.2024
- Titel AI and Common Sense
- Autor Martin W. (London School of Economics, Uk) Bauer
- Untertitel Ambitions and Frictions
- Gewicht 460g
- Herausgeber Routledge