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AI on the Web (cs.berkeley.edu)
24 points by getp on Jan 1, 2008 | hide | past | favorite | 6 comments



Jeff Hawkins, who made a breakthrough in the field and I presume indirectly inspired IBM's Blue Brain experiment, is not in the list. No wonder, though: the official science is too conservative to accept fresh and worthy ideas that fast.

www.onintelligence.org


Norvig doesn't really update the list any more, so a lot of the more recent stuff/people is missing.

Also in the YouTube age, a ton of very interesting lectures/demos/talks are online in video format and he doesn't catalog any of it.


His book On Intelligence was published in 2004.


I really liked that book. Did he really make a breakthrough, though? I know his system is available now, but how does it fare, compared to other technologies?


The breakthrough is in the idea that what our brain does is basically it generalizes input and performs detailization on output. It seems so obvious even speculatively that both generalization and detailization are the core of natural intelligence, yet the AI science so far failed to include them as research subjects at least.

And it seems like Jeff Hawkins found both mechanisms in the neocortex.

Surprisingly, at the moment we don't have any theory for generalization, not even a single try to formalize it and create algorithms -- not to be confused with the theory of inference. Evidently, this is terra incognita and a very promising one.

His claim, though, that what he's found is the intelligence looks like an exaggeration. Intelligence is not only generalization, although there is no intelligence without it.


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