(Toby Walsh) I wanna talk
about artificial intelligence: it's --
I'm a professor of artificial intelligence
and its a great time, 2015,
to be working in AI.
We're making real palpable progress
and there's loads of money
being thrown at us.
Google just spent
five hundred million dollars --
pounds buying an AI startup called Deep Mind a couple of weeks ago,
today they announced that they were
going to spend a billion dollars
setting up an AI lab in Silicon Valley.
IBM is betting about
a third of the company
on their cognitive AI computing effort.
So it's really interesting time to be working in AI.
But the first thing I wanted to
help inform you about
is what is the state of art,
what progress have we made in AI
because Hollywood paints
all these pictures,
these mostly dystopian pictures of AI.
Whenever the next science fiction movie
comes out, I put my head in my hands
and think Oh my God, what do people think
that we're doing?
So, I wanted to start by just giving you
a feel for what actually is really capable.
So a couple of years ago, IBM Watson
won the game show Jeopardy 1,
the million dollar prize in the game show,
Jeopardy P, the reigning human champions.
Now, you might think, well that's just
a party trick, isn't it?
It's a -- pour enough of Wikipedia
and the internet into a computer,
and it can answer general knowledge
questions.
Well, you guys are being a bit unfair to
IBM Watson,
there are the cryptic questions
they are answering.
But just to give you a real feel for
what is technically possible today,
something that was announced
just two days ago:
some colleagues of mine at NII in Japan
passed the University Entrance Exam
with an AI program.
Now, I thought long and hard about
putting up a page of maths.
I thought, well, I'm going to get --
half of the audience is going to leave
immediately if I put up a page of math
But I wanted you to see, just to feel
the depth of questions
that they are answering.
So this is from the maths paper, you know,
a non trivial, sort of,
if you come from the UK,
A-level-like math question
that they were able to answer
Here is a physics question
about Newtonian dynamics
that they were able to answer.
Now they got 511 points, out of
a maximum of 950.
That's more than the average score
of Japanese students
sitting the entrance exam.
They would have got into most
Japanese universities with a score of 511.
That's what's possible today.
Their ambition in 10 years' time is to get
into Tokyo, University of Tokyo,
which is one of the best universities
in the world.
So, this is why I put up
a picture of Terminator,
because whenever I talk to the media
about what we do in AI,
they put up a picture of Terminator,
right?
So I don't want you to worry
about Terminator,
Terminator is at least
50 to 100 years away.
and there are lots of reasons why
we don't have to worry about it,
about Terminator.
I'm not going to go and spend
too much time
on why you don't have to worry about Terminator. ////
depressing news story very comparison
but the chief economist at Bank of
England went on the record saying fifty
percent of jobs under threat
47
and it's not just technology other
ongoing global financial crisis which
seems like it will never disappear great
impact factor
under threat
not technically minded that final answer
your question
jobs