Responsible AI Guidelines

As part of its mission to accelerate adoption of commercial technology within the Department of Defense (DoD), the Defense Innovation Unit (DIU) launched a strategic initiative in March 2020 to integrate the DoD’s Ethical Principles for Artificial Intelligence (AI) into its commercial prototyping and acquisition programs. Drawing upon best practices from government, non-profit, academic, and industry partners, DIU explored methods for implementing these principles in several of its AI prototype projects. The result is a set of Responsible Artificial Intelligence (RAI) Guidelines. Read More

#dod, #ethics

The AI Economist: Optimal Economic Policy Design via Two-level Deep Reinforcement Learning

AI and reinforcement learning (RL) have improved many areas, but are not yet widely adopted in economic policy design, mechanism design, or economics at large. At the same time, current economic methodology is limited by a lack of counterfactual data, simplistic behavioral models, and limited opportunities to experiment with policies and evaluate behavioral responses. Here we show that machine-learning-based economic simulation is a powerful policy and mechanism design framework to overcome these limitations. The AI Economist is a two-level, deep RL framework that trains both agents and a social planner who co-adapt, providing a tractable solution to the highly unstable and novel two-level RL challenge. From a simple specification of an economy, we learn rational agent behaviors that adapt to learned planner policies and vice versa. We demonstrate the efficacy of the AI Economist on the problem of optimal taxation. In simple one-step economies, the AI Economist recovers the optimal tax policy of economic theory. In complex, dynamic economies, the AI Economist substantially improves both utilitarian social welfare and the trade-off between equality and productivity over baselines. It does so despite emergent tax-gaming strategies, while accounting for agent interactions and behavioral change more accurately than economic theory. These results demonstrate for the first time that two-level, deep RL can be used for understanding and as a complement to theory for economic design, unlocking a new computational learning-based approach to understanding economic policy. Read More

#reinforcement-learning

America Needs AI Literacy Now

Can artificial intelligence (AI) replace a doctor in the operating room? Are some AI algorithms inherently biased, or are they merely trained on biased data? If you’re not sure about the answers to these questions, you are not alone. We recently conducted a national survey with Echelon Insights of 1,547 US adults, including a twenty-question ‘True/False/Don’t Know’ quiz, and found that most Americans are remarkably ill-informed about AI. Only 16% of participants “passed” the test (scoring above 60%) indicating that the majority of Americans are AI illiterate. Read More

#artificial-intelligence

Seoul Robotics Announces LiDAR Enabled Autonomous Logistics Platform

The task of transporting cars from the end of the assembly line to its final destination is currently a manual and expensive logistics problem. It includes loading and unloading of vehicles from the factory floor to trucks, ships and rail, with interim stops at parking lots. Seoul Robotics aims to change this. The company has just launched Level 5 Control Tower (LV5 CTRL TWR) system which BMW is leveraging to automate last-mile fleet logistics at their manufacturing facility in Munich.

The system uses SENSR™, a proprietary perception software powered by artificial intelligence (AI) algorithms. SENSR™ works in conjunction with a mesh network of computers and LiDAR sensors located on fixed infrastructure (light poles, roof overhangs, etc) that guides vehicles autonomously through a 5G communications network. Read More

#image-recognition, #robotics

‘We stand on the shoulders of giants’: How Meta’s Vivek Sharma plans to transform Horizon into a cohesive metaverse platform

This story is part of Digiday’s Masters of Uncertainty series, a look at people and companies at the center of media’s defining storylines. Find the rest here.

Vivek Sharma likes to play video games on company time.

Fortunately, this qualifies as research. Sharma leads Meta’s Horizon team, which is tasked with constructing the company’s place in the metaverse — the persistent, immersive virtual space that Mark Zuckerberg sees succeeding the modern internet.

In spite of its new name, Meta is not trying to become the only metaverse platform in town. Sharma acknowledges that a true metaverse is more likely to take shape as a spread of interconnected platforms, not a single dominant virtual world. As vp of Horizon, the major sub-brand encompassing all of Meta’s VR products, the 43-year-old will have to thread the needle of establishing Horizon’s position as a leading metaverse builder without staking an outsized claim to the metaverse itself. Read More

#metaverse

web3 is Centralized

I’ve long been interested in the decentralization of computing and communication in general, and of the web in particular. The trend of communication and information becoming more and more centralized in large corporations is worrying and worth fighting against, particularly from the perspective of systemic risk. I think it even makes sense in many cases to trade efficiency for resilience, by way of decentralization. How does “web3” do on these axes?

The funny thing is, web3, as it exists today and appears to be building towards, is actually more centralized than the web it seeks to replace. Read More

#metaverse

OpenAI’s GLIDE Overtakes DALL-E

In a field with constant evolution, artificial intelligence news is starting to take a bigger share of my attention bandwidth. I’m really into breaking news.

OpenAI researchers this week presented GLIDE (Guided Language-to-Image Diffusion for Generation and Editing), a diffusion model that achieves performance competitive with DALL-E while using less than one-third of the parameters.

Text-to-image generation has been one of the most active and exciting AI fields of 2021. In January, OpenAI introduced DALL-E, a 12-billion parameter version of the company’s GPT-3 transformer language model designed to generate photorealistic images using text captions as prompts.

The GitHub of Glide went live on December 22nd, 2021. Sometimes breaking news in AI is actually worth talking about and I consider this such an occasion. Read More

#image-recognition

New Years Resolutions generated by AI

This month I’m beginning 2022 as the first Futurist in Residence at the Smithsonian Arts and Industries Building.

It’s weird to think of myself as a futurist. I write a lot about the algorithms we’re calling artificial intelligence (AI), but rather than deal with the humanlike science fiction version, I focus on what today’s much simpler AI is capable of. Since today’s AI relies on using trial and error to get better at predicting its training data, and its training data must necessarily be from the past, its job is really to predict the past. This has a big effect on what it’s like to use AI to predict the future.

Since we’re entering 2022, the folks at the Smithsonian thought it would be interesting if I could use AI to generate New Year’s Resolutions. What does it look like if I try to use AI trained on past data to suggest positive changes for the future? Read More

Check out the generator here

#nlp