Artificial intelligence yesterday, today and tomorrow
Jaakkola, H.; Henno, J.; Mäkelä, J.; Thalheim, B. (2019-05-01)
Jaakkola, H.
Henno, J.
Mäkelä, J.
Thalheim, B.
Teoksen toimittaja(t)
Skala, Karolj
Car, Zeljka
Pale, Predrag
Huljenic, Darko
Janjic, Matej
Koricic, Marko
Sruk, Vlado
Ribaric, Slobodan
Grbac, Tihana Galinac
Butkovic, Zeljko
Cicin-Sain, Marina
Skvorc, Dejan
Mauher, Mladen
Babic, Snjezana
Gros, Stjepan
Vrdoljak, Boris
Tijan, Edvard
IEEE
01.05.2019
Julkaisun pysyvä osoite on
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi:tuni-202011248165
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi:tuni-202011248165
Kuvaus
Peer reviewed
Tiivistelmä
Artificial Intelligence (AI) is one of the current emerging technologies. In the history of computing AI has been in the similar role earlier - almost every decade since the 1950s, when the programming language Lisp was invented and used to implement self-modifying applications. The second time that AI was described as one of the frontier technologies was in the 1970s, when Expert Systems (ES) were developed. A decade later AI was again at the forefront when the Japanese government initiated its research and development effort to develop an AI-based computer architecture called the Fifth Generation Computer System (FGCS). Currently in the 2010s, AI is again on the frontier in the form of (self-)learning systems manifesting in robot applications, smart hubs, intelligent data analytics, etc. What is the reason for the cyclic reincarnation of AI? This paper gives a brief description of the history of AI and also answers the question above. The current AI “cycle” has the capability to change the world in many ways. In the context of the CE conference, it is important to understand the changes it will cause in education, the skills expected in different professions, and in society at large.
Kokoelmat
- TUNICRIS-julkaisut [16951]