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Artificial intelligence and moral enhancement : With respect to moral reasoning, some consider humans to be suboptimal information processors, moral judges, and moral agents. Due to stress or time constraints, people often fail to consider all the relevant factors and information necessary to make well-reasoned moral j... |
Artificial intelligence and moral enhancement : The classical ideal observer theory is a metaethical theory about the meaning of moral statements. It holds that a moral statement is any statement to which an "ideal observer" would react or respond in a certain way. An ideal observer is defined as being: (1) omniscient ... |
Artificial intelligence and moral enhancement : Exhaustive enhancement involves scenarios where human moral decision-making is supplanted, left entirely to machines. Some proponents consider machines as being morally superior to humans and that just doing as the machines say would constitute moral improvement. Opponent... |
Artificial intelligence and moral enhancement : Artificial moral agents could be made to be configurable so as to be able to match the moral commitments of their users. This would preserve the existing pluralism in societies. Beyond matching their users’ moral commitments, artificial moral agents could emulate historic... |
Artificial intelligence and moral enhancement : AI alignment Artificial intelligence Automated decision-making Decision support system Intelligent tutoring system Legal informatics Machine ethics Moral reasoning Multi-agent systems Project Debater Superintelligence == References == |
Moravec's paradox : Moravec's paradox is the observation in the fields of artificial intelligence and robotics that, contrary to traditional assumptions, reasoning requires very little computation, but sensorimotor and perception skills require enormous computational resources. The principle was articulated in the 1980... |
Moravec's paradox : One possible explanation of the paradox, offered by Moravec, is based on evolution. All human skills are implemented biologically, using machinery designed by the process of natural selection. In the course of their evolution, natural selection has tended to preserve design improvements and optimiza... |
Moravec's paradox : In the early days of artificial intelligence research, leading researchers often predicted that they would be able to create thinking machines in just a few decades (see history of artificial intelligence). Their optimism stemmed in part from the fact that they had been successful at writing program... |
Moravec's paradox : Linguist and cognitive scientist Steven Pinker considers this the main lesson uncovered by AI researchers in his 1994 book The Language Instinct. |
Moravec's paradox : AI effect Embodied cognition History of artificial intelligence Subsumption architecture |
Moravec's paradox : Explanation of the XKCD comic about Moravec's paradox |
Neats and scruffies : In the history of artificial intelligence (AI), neat and scruffy are two contrasting approaches to AI research. The distinction was made in the 1970s, and was a subject of discussion until the mid-1980s. "Neats" use algorithms based on a single formal paradigm, such as logic, mathematical optimiza... |
Neats and scruffies : The distinction between neat and scruffy originated in the mid-1970s, by Roger Schank. Schank used the terms to characterize the difference between his work on natural language processing (which represented commonsense knowledge in the form of large amorphous semantic networks) from the work of Jo... |
Neats and scruffies : The scruffy approach was applied to robotics by Rodney Brooks in the mid-1980s. He advocated building robots that were, as he put it, Fast, Cheap and Out of Control, the title of a 1989 paper co-authored with Anita Flynn. Unlike earlier robots such as Shakey or the Stanford cart, they did not buil... |
Neats and scruffies : In 1986 Marvin Minsky published The Society of Mind which advocated a view of intelligence and the mind as an interacting community of modules or agents that each handled different aspects of cognition, where some modules were specialized for very specific tasks (e.g. edge detection in the visual ... |
Neats and scruffies : New statistical and mathematical approaches to AI were developed in the 1990s, using highly developed formalisms such as mathematical optimization and neural networks. Pamela McCorduck wrote that "As I write, AI enjoys a Neat hegemony, people who believe that machine intelligence, at least, is bes... |
Neats and scruffies : Neats John McCarthy Allen Newell Herbert A. Simon Edward Feigenbaum Robert Kowalski Judea Pearl Scruffies Rodney Brooks Terry Winograd Marvin Minsky Roger Schank Doug Lenat |
Neats and scruffies : History of artificial intelligence Soft computing Symbolic AI Philosophy of artificial intelligence |
Neats and scruffies : Brockman, John (7 May 1996). Third Culture: Beyond the Scientific Revolution. Simon and Schuster. Retrieved 2 August 2021. Crevier, Daniel (1993). AI: The Tumultuous Search for Artificial Intelligence. New York, NY: BasicBooks. ISBN 0-465-02997-3.. Domingos, Pedro (22 September 2015). The Master A... |
Neats and scruffies : Anderson, John R. (2005). "Human symbol manipulation within an integrated cognitive architecture". Cognitive Science. 29 (3): 313–341. doi:10.1207/s15516709cog0000_22. PMID 21702777. Brooks, Rodney A. (2001-01-18). "The Relationship Between Matter and Life". Nature. 409 (6818): 409–411. Bibcode:20... |
The Outer Limits (1995 TV series) : The Outer Limits is a science fiction anthology television series that originally aired between 1995 and 2002 on Showtime, Syfy, Channel 7 and in syndication. The series is a revival of the original The Outer Limits series that aired from 1963 to 1965. The Outer Limits is an antholog... |
The Outer Limits (1995 TV series) : After an attempt to bring back The Outer Limits during the early 1980s, it was finally relaunched in 1995. The success of television speculative fiction such as Star Trek: The Next Generation and The X-Files and anthology shows such as Tales from the Crypt convinced rights holder Met... |
The Outer Limits (1995 TV series) : The series was filmed in Vancouver, British Columbia, and Victoria, British Columbia. Stories by Harlan Ellison, A. E. van Vogt, Eando Binder, Richard Matheson, Larry Niven, Stephen King, George R.R. Martin and James Patrick Kelly were adapted. Leslie Stevens was a program consultant... |
The Outer Limits (1995 TV series) : Between 2002 and 2006, six themed DVD anthologies of The Outer Limits, with six episodes each, were released by MGM in the United States: Aliens Among Us, Death & Beyond, Fantastic Androids & Robots, Mutation & Transformation, Sex & Science Fiction, and Time Travel & Infinity. These ... |
The Outer Limits (1995 TV series) : Between 1996 and 1997, Prima Publishing published three books which served as compilations of mostly prose adaptations for episodes from the 1963 and 1995 series. Between 1997 and 1999, a series of books based on the show but aimed towards younger readers was published by Tor Books, ... |
The Outer Limits (1995 TV series) : An MMO for the reboot was planned under the title The Outer Limits On-Line. MGM was working with Worlds Inc. In 2014, it was reported that a feature film directed by Scott Derrickson based on the series was in development. In April 2019, a revival was in the works at a premium cable ... |
The Outer Limits (1995 TV series) : Two identical indoor roller coasters named The Outer Limits: Flight of Fear opened in 1996 at Paramount's Kings Dominion in Richmond, Virginia, and Paramount's Kings Island in Cincinnati, Ohio. Loosely based on several episodes of The Outer Limits, both rides are heavily themed to an... |
The Outer Limits (1995 TV series) : The Outer Limits (1963 TV series) List of The Outer Limits (1963 TV series) episodes Science fiction on television |
Philosophy of information : The philosophy of information (PI) is a branch of philosophy that studies topics relevant to information processing, representational system and consciousness, cognitive science, computer science, information science and information technology. It includes: the critical investigation of the ... |
Philosophy of information : The philosophy of information (PI) has evolved from the philosophy of artificial intelligence, logic of information, cybernetics, social theory, ethics and the study of language and information. |
Philosophy of information : The concept information has been defined by several theorists. Charles S. Peirce's theory of information was embedded in his wider theory of symbolic communication he called the semiotic, now a major part of semiotics. For Peirce, information integrates the aspects of signs and expressions s... |
Philosophy of information : Luciano Floridi, "What is the Philosophy of Information?" Metaphilosophy, 33.1/2: 123-145. Reprinted in T.W. Bynum and J.H. Moor (eds.), 2003. CyberPhilosophy: The Intersection of Philosophy and Computing. Oxford – New York: Blackwell. -------- (ed.), 2004. The Blackwell Guide to the Philoso... |
Philosophy of information : Adriaans, Pieter (Autumn 2013). "Information". In Zalta, Edward N. (ed.). Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Floridi, Luciano (Spring 2015). "Semantic Conceptions of Information". In Zalta, Edward N. (ed.). Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. IEG site, the Oxford University research group... |
Physical symbol system : A physical symbol system (also called a formal system) takes physical patterns (symbols), combining them into structures (expressions) and manipulating them (using processes) to produce new expressions. The physical symbol system hypothesis (PSSH) is a position in the philosophy of artificial i... |
Physical symbol system : Examples of physical symbol systems include: Formal logic: the symbols are words like "and", "or", "not", "for all x" and so on. The expressions are statements in formal logic which can be true or false. The processes are the rules of logical deduction. Algebra: the symbols are "+", "×", "x", "... |
Physical symbol system : Two lines of evidence suggested to Allen Newell and Herbert A. Simon that "symbol manipulation" was the essence of both human and machine intelligence: psychological experiments on human beings and the development of artificial intelligence programs. |
Physical symbol system : The physical symbol systems hypothesis becomes trivial, incoherent or irrelevant unless we recognize three distinctions: between "digitized signals" and "symbols"; between "narrow" AI and general intelligence; and between consciousness and intelligent behavior. |
Physical symbol system : Nils Nilsson has identified four main "themes" or grounds in which the physical symbol system hypothesis has been attacked. The "erroneous claim that the [physical symbol system hypothesis] lacks symbol grounding" which is presumed to be a requirement for general intelligent action. The common ... |
Physical symbol system : Artificial intelligence, situated approach Artificial philosophy |
Physical symbol system : Brooks, Rodney (1990), "Elephants Don't Play Chess" (PDF), Robotics and Autonomous Systems, 6 (1–2): 3–15, CiteSeerX 10.1.1.588.7539, doi:10.1016/S0921-8890(05)80025-9, retrieved 2007-08-30. Cole, David (Fall 2004), "The Chinese Room Argument", in Zalta, Edward N. (ed.), The Stanford Encycloped... |
Risk of astronomical suffering : Risks of astronomical suffering, also called suffering risks or s-risks, are risks involving much more suffering than all that has occurred on Earth so far. They are sometimes categorized as a subclass of existential risks. According to some scholars, s-risks warrant serious considerati... |
Risk of astronomical suffering : To mitigate s-risks, efforts focus on researching and understanding the factors that exacerbate them, particularly in emerging technologies and social structures. Targeted strategies include promoting safe AI design, ensuring cooperation among AI developers, and modeling future civiliza... |
Risk of astronomical suffering : Baumann, Tobias (2022). Avoiding the Worst: How to Prevent a Moral Catastrophe. Independently published. ISBN 979-8359800037. Metzinger, Thomas (2021-02-19). "Artificial Suffering: An Argument for a Global Moratorium on Synthetic Phenomenology". Journal of Artificial Intelligence and Co... |
Robot ethics : Robot ethics, sometimes known as "roboethics", concerns ethical problems that occur with robots, such as whether robots pose a threat to humans in the long or short run, whether some uses of robots are problematic (such as in healthcare or as 'killer robots' in war), and how robots should be designed suc... |
Robot ethics : Some of the central discussion of ethics in relation to the treatment of non-human or non-biological things and their potential "spirituality". Another central topic, has to do with the development of machinery and eventually robots, this philosophy was also applied to robotics. One of the first publicat... |
Robot ethics : Roboethics as a science or philosophical topic has begun to be a common theme in science fiction literature and films. One film that could be argued to be ingrained in pop culture that depicts the dystopian future use of robotic AI is The Matrix, depicting a future where humans and conscious sentient AI ... |
Robot ethics : Lethal Autonomous Weapon Systems (LAWS) which is often called “killer robots,” are theoretically able to target and fire without human supervision and interference. In 2014, the Convention on Conventional Weapons (CCW) held two meetings. The first was the Meeting of Experts on Lethal Autonomous Weapons S... |
Robot ethics : In 2015, the Campaign Against Sex Robots (CASR) was launched to draw attention to the sexual relationship of humans with machines. The campaign claims that sex robots are potentially harmful and will contribute to inequalities in society, and that an organized approach and ethical response against the de... |
Robot ethics : With contemporary technological issues emerging as society pushes on, one topic that requires thorough thought is robot ethics concerning the law. Academics have been debating the process of how a government could go about creating legislation with robot ethics and law. A pair of scholars that have been ... |
Robot ethics : There is mixed evidence as to whether people judge robot behavior similarly to humans or not. Some evidence indicates that people view bad behavior negatively and good behavior positively regardless of whether the agent of the behavior is a human or a robot; however, robots receive less credit for good b... |
Robot ethics : Machine ethics Robot rights Robotics Ethics of artificial intelligence |
Robot ethics : Levy, David (November, 2008). Love and Sex with Robots: The Evolution of Human-Robot Relationships. Harper Perennial. Richards, Neil M.; Smart, William D. (2013). How should the law think about robots?: https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2263363 Jean-Baptiste Jeangène Vilmer (March 23, 2... |
Robot ethics : Lin, Patrick/Abney, Keith/Bekey, George A. (December, 2011). Robot Ethics: The Ethical and Social Implications of Robotics. MIT Press. Tzafestas, Spyros G. (2016). Roboethics A Navigating Overview. Berlin: Springer. ISBN 978-3-319-21713-0. |
Robot ethics : PhilPapers - the standard bibliography on roboethics is on Ethics + Emerging Sciences Group The Markkula Center for Applied Ethics at Santa Clara University, USA List of organisations and conferences from euRobotics topics group "ethical, legal and socio-economic issues" (ELS) Conference list on the "Rob... |
Roko's basilisk : Roko's basilisk is a thought experiment which states there could be an otherwise benevolent artificial superintelligence (AI) in the future that would punish anyone who knew of its potential existence but did not directly contribute to its advancement or development, in order to incentivize said advan... |
Roko's basilisk : The LessWrong forum was created in 2009 by artificial intelligence theorist Eliezer Yudkowsky. Yudkowsky had popularized the concept of friendly artificial intelligence, and originated the theories of coherent extrapolated volition (CEV) and timeless decision theory (TDT) in papers published in his ow... |
Roko's basilisk : In 2014, Slate magazine called Roko's basilisk "The Most Terrifying Thought Experiment of All Time" while Yudkowsky had called it "a genuinely dangerous thought" upon its posting. However, opinions diverged on LessWrong itself – user Gwern stated "Only a few LWers seem to take the basilisk very seriou... |
Roko's basilisk : Dead Internet theory – Conspiracy theory on online bot activity The Game (mind game) – Mental thought-suppression game "I Have No Mouth, and I Must Scream" – 1967 short story by Harlan Ellison Singleton (global governance) – hypothetical world order in which there is a single decision-making agencyPag... |
Roko's basilisk : Giuliano RM (December 2020). "Echoes of myth and magic in the language of Artificial Intelligence". AI & Society. 35 (4): 1009–1024. doi:10.1007/s00146-020-00966-4. Kao, Griffin; Hong, Jessica; Perusse, Michael; Sheng, Weizhen (28 February 2020). "Dataism and Transhumanism: Religion in the New Age". T... |
Singularitarianism : Singularitarianism is a movement defined by the belief that a technological singularity—the creation of superintelligence—will likely happen in the medium future, and that deliberate action ought to be taken to ensure that the singularity benefits humans. Singularitarians are distinguished from oth... |
Singularitarianism : The term "Singularitarian" was originally defined by Extropian thinker Mark Plus (Mark Potts) in 1991 to mean "one who believes the concept of a Singularity". This term has since been redefined to mean "Singularity activist" or "friend of the Singularity"; that is, one who acts so as to bring about... |
Singularitarianism : An early singularitarian articulation that history is making progress toward a point of superhuman intelligence is found in Hegel's work, The Phenomenology of Spirit. In 1993, mathematician, computer scientist, and science fiction author Vernor Vinge hypothesized that the moment might come when tec... |
Singularitarianism : There are several objections to Kurzweil's singularitarianism, and these even include criticisms from optimists within the A.I. field. For instance, Pulitzer Prize winning author Douglas Hofstadter argued that Kurzweil's predicted achievement of human-level A.I. by 2045 is not viable. Even Gordon M... |
Singularitarianism : Artificial general intelligence Eschatology Existential risk from artificial general intelligence Global brain Intelligence explosion Outline of transhumanism Post-scarcity economy Technological utopianism |
Singularitarianism : Ethical Issues in Advanced Artificial Intelligence by Nick Bostrom, 2003 "The Consciousness Conundrum", a criticism of singularitarians by John Horgan |
Synthetic intelligence : Synthetic intelligence (SI) is an alternative/opposite term for artificial intelligence emphasizing that the intelligence of machines need not be an imitation or in any way artificial; it can be a genuine form of intelligence. John Haugeland proposes an analogy with simulated diamonds and synth... |
Synthetic intelligence : The term was used by Haugeland in 1986 to describe artificial intelligence research up to that point, which he called "good old fashioned artificial intelligence" or "GOFAI". AI's first generation of researchers firmly believed their techniques would lead to real, human-like intelligence in mac... |
Synthetic intelligence : Artificial intelligence AI-complete Simulated reality Synthetic biology |
Synthetic intelligence : What Is AI? – An introduction to artificial intelligence by John McCarthy—a co-founder of the field, and the person who coined the term. Barr, Avron; Feigenbaum, Edward A. (1981). The Handbook of artificial intelligence, volume 1. Stanford, CA; Los Altos, CA: HeurisTech Press; William Kaufmann.... |
Technological singularity : The technological singularity—or simply the singularity—is a hypothetical point in time at which technological growth becomes uncontrollable and irreversible, resulting in unforeseeable consequences for human civilization. According to the most popular version of the singularity hypothesis, ... |
Technological singularity : Although technological progress has been accelerating in most areas, it has been limited by the basic intelligence of the human brain, which has not, according to Paul R. Ehrlich, changed significantly for millennia. However, with the increasing power of computers and other technologies, it ... |
Technological singularity : A superintelligence, hyperintelligence, or superhuman intelligence is a hypothetical agent that possesses intelligence far surpassing that of the brightest and most gifted human minds. "Superintelligence" may also refer to the form or degree of intelligence possessed by such an agent. John v... |
Technological singularity : There have been numerous dates predicted for the attainment of singularity. In 1965, Good wrote that it was more probable than not that an ultra-intelligent machine would be built within the twentieth century. That computing capabilities for human-level AI would be available in supercomputer... |
Technological singularity : Prominent technologists and academics dispute the plausibility of a technological singularity, including Paul Allen, Jeff Hawkins, John Holland, Jaron Lanier, Steven Pinker, Theodore Modis, and Gordon Moore, whose law is often cited in support of the concept. Most proposed methods for creati... |
Technological singularity : Both for human and artificial intelligence, hardware improvements increase the rate of future hardware improvements. An analogy to Moore's Law suggests that if the first doubling of speed took 18 months, the second would take 18 subjective months; or 9 external months, whereafter, four month... |
Technological singularity : Some intelligence technologies, like "seed AI", may also have the potential to not just make themselves faster, but also more efficient, by modifying their source code. These improvements would make further improvements possible, which would make further improvements possible, and so on. The... |
Technological singularity : Some critics, like philosophers Hubert Dreyfus and John Searle, assert that computers or machines cannot achieve human intelligence. Others, like physicist Stephen Hawking, object that whether machines can achieve a true intelligence or merely something similar to intelligence is irrelevant ... |
Technological singularity : Dramatic changes in the rate of economic growth have occurred in the past because of technological advancement. Based on population growth, the economy doubled every 250,000 years from the Paleolithic era until the Neolithic Revolution. The new agricultural economy doubled every 900 years, a... |
Technological singularity : In a hard takeoff scenario, an artificial superintelligence rapidly self-improves, "taking control" of the world (perhaps in a matter of hours), too quickly for significant human-initiated error correction or for a gradual tuning of the agent's goals. In a soft takeoff scenario, the AI still... |
Technological singularity : Eric Drexler, one of the founders of nanotechnology, theorized in 1986 the possibility of cell repair devices, including ones operating within cells and using as yet hypothetical biological machines. According to Richard Feynman, it was his former graduate student and collaborator Albert Hib... |
Technological singularity : A paper by Mahendra Prasad, published in AI Magazine, asserts that the 18th-century mathematician Marquis de Condorcet was the first person to hypothesize and mathematically model an intelligence explosion and its effects on humanity. An early description of the idea was made in John W. Camp... |
Technological singularity : In 2007, the Joint Economic Committee of the United States Congress released a report about the future of nanotechnology. It predicts significant technological and political changes in the mid-term future, including possible technological singularity. Former President of the United States Ba... |
Technological singularity : Artificial consciousness – Field in cognitive science Ephemeralization – Technological advancement theory Global brain – Futuristic concept of a global interconnected network Technological revolution – Period of rapid technological change Technophobia – Fear or discomfort with advanced techn... |
Technological singularity : Krüger, Oliver, Virtual Immortality. God, Evolution, and the Singularity in Post- and Transhumanism., Bielefeld: transcript 2021. ISBN 978-3-8376-5059-4. Marcus, Gary, "Am I Human?: Researchers need new ways to distinguish artificial intelligence from the natural kind", Scientific American, ... |
Technological singularity : singularity | technology, britannica.com The Coming Technological Singularity: How to Survive in the Post-Human Era (on Vernor Vinge's web site, retrieved Jul 2019) Intelligence Explosion FAQ by the Machine Intelligence Research Institute Blog on bootstrapping artificial intelligence by Jacq... |
TESCREAL : TESCREAL is an acronym neologism proposed by computer scientist Timnit Gebru and philosopher Émile P. Torres that stands for "Transhumanism, Extropianism, Singularitarianism, (modern) Cosmism, Rationalism, Effective Altruism, and Longtermism". Gebru and Torres argue that these ideologies should be treated as... |
TESCREAL : Gebru and Torres proposed the term "TESCREAL" in 2023, first using it in a draft of a paper titled "The TESCREAL bundle: Eugenics and the promise of utopia through artificial general intelligence". First Monday published the paper in April 2024, though Torres and Gebru popularized the term elsewhere before t... |
TESCREAL : According to critics of these philosophies, TESCREAL describes overlapping movements endorsed by prominent people in the tech industry to provide intellectual backing to pursue and prioritize projects including artificial general intelligence (AGI), life extension, and space colonization. Science fiction aut... |
TESCREAL : In 2023, venture capitalist Marc Andreessen published the "Techno-Optimist Manifesto", which Jag Bhalla and Nathan J. Robinson have called a "perfect example" of TESCREAL ideologies. In it, he argues that more advanced artificial intelligence could save countless future potential lives, and that those workin... |
TESCREAL : Effective accelerationism LessWrong Utilitarianism The Californian Ideology == References == |
Transhumanism : Transhumanism is a philosophical and intellectual movement that advocates the enhancement of the human condition by developing and making widely available new and future technologies that can greatly enhance longevity, cognition, and well-being. Transhumanist thinkers study the potential benefits and da... |
Transhumanism : It is a matter of debate whether transhumanism is a branch of posthumanism and how this philosophical movement should be conceptualised with regard to transhumanism. Transhumanism is often referred to as a variant or activist form of posthumanism by its conservative, Christian and progressive critics. A... |
Transhumanism : While some transhumanists take an abstract and theoretical approach to the perceived benefits of emerging technologies, others have offered specific proposals for modifications to the human body, including heritable ones. Transhumanists are often concerned with methods of enhancing the human nervous sys... |
Transhumanism : The very notion and prospect of human enhancement and related issues arouse public controversy. Criticisms of transhumanism and its proposals take two main forms: those objecting to the likelihood of transhumanist goals being achieved (practical criticisms) and those objecting to the moral principles or... |
Transhumanism : Adorno, F. P. (2021). The Transhumanist Movement. New York: Palgrave MacMillan. ISBN 978-3-030-82423-5. Cole-Turner, Ronald, ed. (2011). Transhumanism and transcendence: Christian hope in an age of technological enhancement. Washington, D.C.: Georgetown University Press. ISBN 978-1-58901-780-1. Frodeman... |
Transhumanism : TH-Pedia, transhumanist wiki What is Transhumanism? |
Uncanny valley : The uncanny valley (Japanese: 不気味の谷, Hepburn: bukimi no tani) effect is a hypothesized psychological and aesthetic relation between an object's degree of resemblance to a human being and the emotional response to the object. The uncanny valley hypothesis predicts that an entity appearing almost human w... |
Uncanny valley : As related to robotics engineering, robotics professor Masahiro Mori first introduced the concept in 1970 from his book titled Bukimi No Tani (不気味の谷), phrasing it as bukimi no tani genshō (不気味の谷現象, lit. 'uncanny valley phenomenon'). Bukimi no tani was translated literally as uncanny valley in the 1978 ... |
Uncanny valley : Mori's original hypothesis states that as the appearance of a robot is made more human, some observers' emotional response to the robot becomes increasingly positive and empathetic, until it becomes almost human, at which point the response quickly becomes strong revulsion. However, as the robot's appe... |
Uncanny valley : A number of theories have been proposed to explain the cognitive mechanism causing the phenomenon: Mate selection: Automatic, stimulus-driven appraisals of uncanny stimuli elicit aversion by activating an evolved cognitive mechanism for the avoidance of selecting mates with low fertility, poor hormonal... |
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