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CMU-CS-03-106
Computer Science Department
School of Computer Science, Carnegie Mellon University
CMU-CS-03-106
That's AI?: A History and Critique of the Field
Latanya Sweeney
July 2003
CMU-CS-03-106.ps
CMU-CS-03-106.pdf
Keywords: History of AI, philosophy of AI, human intelligence,
machine intelligence, Turing Test, reasoning
What many AI researchers do when they say they are doing AI contradicts
what some AI researchers say is AI. Surveys of leading AI textbooks
demonstrate a lack of a generally accepted historical record. These
surveys also show AI researchers as primarily concerned with prescribing
ideal mathematical behaviors into computers -- accounting for 987 of 996
(or 99%) of the AI references surveyed. The most common expectation of
AI concerns constructing machines that behave like humans, yet only
27 of 996, (or 2%) of the AI references surveyed were directly consistent
with this description. Both approaches have shortcomings prescribing
superior behavior into machines fails to scale to multiple tasks easily,
while on the other hand, modeling human behaviors in machines can give
results that are not always correct or fast. The discrepancy between
the kind of work conducted in AI and the kind of work expected from AI
cripples the ability to measure progress in the field.
29 pages
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