AGI Series 2024 – Stuart Russell – AGI: What if we succeed?



Stuart Russell is Distinguished Professor of Computer Science at University of California, Berkeley, where he founded and leads the Center for Human-Compatible Artificial Intelligence. He is the co-author with Peter Norvig of the authoritative textbook on AI, Artificial Intelligence: A Modern Approach, and author of Human Compatible: Artificial Intelligence and the Problem of Control.

OpenAI defines Artificial General Intelligence (AGI) as: ‘a highly autonomous system that can outperform humans at most economically valuable work.’

This series addresses the theme of AGI. Are we there yet? If not, how far are we away? What would it take to reach AGI? And are the implications – the dangers, the risks and advantages – of reaching AGI?

ARTIFICIAL GENERAL INTELLIGENCE

Sun 15 September [10.00 am EST]
STUART RUSSELL (UC BERKELEY)
AGI – WHAT IF WE SUCCEED?

Sun 22 September [10.00 am EST]
NEIL LEACH (FIU)
ALIEN INTELLIGENCE: AN INTRODUCTION TO AGI

Sun 29 September [10.00am EST]
AGI FOR DESIGNERS
Neil Leach, Karla Sandana Ochoa, Daniel Bolojan, Philippe Morel, Michael Just,
Smaro Katsangelou

Sun 6 October [11.30 am EST]
BLAISE AGUERA Y ARCAS (Google)
AGI – ARE WE THERE YET?

Sun 13 October [10.00am EST]
KARL FRISTON (UCL)
THE PHYSICS OF SENTIENCE

source

Save This Post
Please login to bookmarkClose