On our best behaviour

作者:

摘要

The science of AI is concerned with the study of intelligent forms of behaviour in computational terms. But what does it tell us when a good semblance of a behaviour can be achieved using cheap tricks that seem to have little to do with what we intuitively imagine intelligence to be? Are these intuitions wrong, and is intelligence really just a bag of tricks? Or are the philosophers right, and is a behavioural understanding of intelligence simply too weak? I think both of these are wrong. I suggest in the context of question-answering that what matters when it comes to the science of AI is not a good semblance of intelligent behaviour at all, but the behaviour itself, what it depends on, and how it can be achieved. I go on to discuss two major hurdles that I believe will need to be cleared.

论文关键词:IJCAI Research Excellence

论文评审过程:Received 25 September 2013, Revised 11 February 2014, Accepted 21 March 2014, Available online 28 March 2014.

论文官网地址:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.artint.2014.03.007