Psycho-Babble Social Thread 400140

Shown: posts 1 to 3 of 3. This is the beginning of the thread.

 

There is life on the net

Posted by alexandra_k on October 7, 2004, at 19:04:36

Its the viruses you see...

They are alive.
Self-replicating
Mutating
Evolving -
Faster than the course of our evolution.
What are they evolving into?
Will they become intelligent, like us?

 

Re: There is life on the net

Posted by alexandra_k on October 10, 2004, at 3:35:44

In reply to There is life on the net, posted by alexandra_k on October 7, 2004, at 19:04:36

Lets suppose a person gets a degenerative brain disease.
The surgeons start replacing the neurons with silicon chips.
After a number of years there aren't any neurons left - just silicon chips playing the same functional role.
The person behaves just the same after the operations as they did before,
but do they have mental states like belief and desire? Is it conscious? If it isn't then what happened to the consciousness? Did it just dwindle away?

 

Re: There is life on the net

Posted by alexandra_k on October 11, 2004, at 21:11:11

In reply to Re: There is life on the net, posted by alexandra_k on October 10, 2004, at 3:35:44

"The Sociable Machines Project develops an expressive anthropomorphic robot called Kismet that engages people in natural and expressive face-to-face interaction. Inspired by infant social development, psychology, ethology, and evolution, this work integrates theories and concepts from these diverse viewpoints to enable Kismet to enter into natural and intuitive social interaction with a human caregiver and to learn from them, reminiscent of parent-infant exchanges. To do this, Kismet perceives a variety of natural social cues from visual and auditory channels, and delivers social signals to the human caregiver through gaze direction, facial expression, body posture, and vocal babbles. The robot has been designed to support several social cues and skills that could ultimately play an important role in socially situated learning with a human instructor. These capabilities are evaluated with respect to the ability of naive subjects to read and interpret the robot's social cues, the robot's ability to perceive and appropriately respond to human social cues, the human's willingness to provide scaffolding to facilitate the robot's learning, and how this produces a rich, flexible, dynamic interaction that is physical, affective, social, and affords a rich opportunity for learning."

Check it out:

http://www.ai.mit.edu/projects/humanoid-robotics-group/kismet/kismet.html

I think this is really cool. I don't have much of a maternal instinct; but there is something about Kismet...


This is the end of the thread.


Show another thread

URL of post in thread:


Psycho-Babble Social | Extras | FAQ


[dr. bob] Dr. Bob is Robert Hsiung, MD, bob@dr-bob.org

Script revised: February 4, 2008
URL: http://www.dr-bob.org/cgi-bin/pb/mget.pl
Copyright 2006-17 Robert Hsiung.
Owned and operated by Dr. Bob LLC and not the University of Chicago.