Sinece the dawn of human
ingenuity, people have devised ever more cunning tools to cope with work that is dangerous, boring, burdensome, or just plain nasty. That
compulsion has resulted in robotics -- the science of conferring various human capabilities on machines. And if scientists have yet to create the mechanical
version of science
fiction, they have begun to come close.
As a result, the modern world is
increasingly populated by intelligent gizmos whose presence we barely notice but whose universal existence has removed much human labor. Our factories hum to the
rhythm of robot assembly arms. Our
banking is done at automated
teller terminals that thank us with mechanical
politeness for the transaction. Our
subway trains are controlled by
tireless robo-drivers. And thanks to the
continual miniaturization of electronics and micro-mechanics, there are already robot systems that can perform some kinds of brain and bone
surgery with submillimetre accuracy-- far greater
precision than highly
skilled physicians can achieve with their hands along.
But if robots are to reach the next stage of laborsaving
utility, they will have to operate with less human
supervision and be able to make at least a few decisions for themselves goals that pose a real challenge. "While we know how to tell a robot to handle a
specific error," says Dave Lavery, manager of a robotics program at NASA. "we can't yet give a robot enough 'common sense' to reliably interact with a dynamic world."
Indeed the quest for true artificial intelligence has produced very mixed results. Despite a spell of
initial optimism in the 1960s and 1970s when it appeared that transistor circuits and microprocessors might be able to copy the action of the human brain by the year 2010, researchers lately have begun to extend that
forecast by decades if not centuries.
What they found, in attempting to model thought, is that the human brain's
roughly one hundrend
billion nerve cells are much more talented -- and human
perception far more complicated -- than
previously imangined. They have built robots that can recognize the error of a machine panel by a
fraction of a millimeter in a controlled facrory
environment. But the human mind can glimpse a rapidly changing scene and immediately
disregard the 98 per-cent that is irrelevant, instantaneously focusing on the monkey at the side of winding forest road or the single
suspicious face in a big crowd. The most advanced computer systems on Earth can't approach that kind of ability, and neuroscientists still don't know quite how we do it.
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