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Neuroscientists Are Making an Artificial Brain for Everyone
I’m fairly new to San Francisco, so I’m still building my mental database of restaurants I like. But this weekend, I know exactly where I’m heading to for dinner: Nick’s Crispy Tacos. Then, when I get home, I’m kicking back to a documentary I’ve never heard of, a Mongolian drama called The Cave of the Yellow Dog.
An artificially intelligent algorithm told me I’d enjoy both these things. I’d like the restaurant, the machine told me, because I prefer Mexican food and wine bars “with a casual atmosphere,” and the movie because “drama movies are in my digital DNA.” Besides, the title shows up around the web next to Boyhood, another film I like.
Nara Logics, the company behind this algorithm, is the brainchild (pun intended) of its CTO and cofounder, Nathan Wilson, a former research scientist at MIT who holds a doctorate in brain and cognitive science. Wilson spent his academic career and early professional life immersed in studying neural networks—software that mimics how a human mind thinks and makes connections. Nara Logics’ brain-like platform, under development for the past five years, is the product of all that thinking..
'Nara is AI for the people.' Nathan Wilson, Nara Logics
The Cambridge, Massachusetts-based company includes on its board such bigwig neuroscientists as Sebastian Seung from Princeton, Mriganka Sur from MIT, and Emily Hueske of Harvard’s Center for Brain and Science.
So what does all that neuroscience brain power have to offer the tech world, when so many Internet giants—from Google and Facebook to Microsoft and Baidu—already have specialized internal teams looking to push the boundaries of artificial intelligence? These behemoths use AI to bolster their online services, everything from on-the-fly translations to image recognition services. But to hear Wilson tell it, all that in-house work still leaves a large gap—namely, all the businesses and people who could benefit from access to an artificial brain but can’t build it themselves. “We’re building a pipeline, and taking insights out of the lab to intelligent, applied use cases,” Wilson tells WIRED. “Nara is AI for the people.”
Problems Worth Solving
Wilson is not alone in his populist ambition. The list of other companies that have been created to make high-level artificial intelligence more accessible to the broader universe is not short. But so many of these have also been acquired by the aforementioned giants of tech—in fact, such acquisitions often seem to be a key reason behind their existences in the first place.
Nara, on the other hand, exhibits some actual consumer-facing friendliness. The site where I got my recommendations, Nara.me, is available for anyone to sign up to get intelligent recommendations for movies, restaurants, and hotels based on your expressed preferences. There are also some filters available, so you can tell the software what you’re in the mood for at any point in time—maybe Chinese food and a comedy—so it can adjust to your changing impulses. Once you’ve fed Nara a few of your likes, it can learn your tastes and work across the entire system. Say you’ve moved from New York to San Francisco. Tell the app a few of your favorite restaurants in Manhattan, and it’ll surface similar options in your new home city. There’s even a mobile app that can detect your location and serve up suggestions that are close by.
But Nara says it’s not ultimately focused on delivering a polished consumer product. Wilson and his team want to focus on enhancing the AI, he explains, not on acquiring users. There are businesses that already have a plethora of users. For Nara, it’s those established businesses whose existing problems are most worth solving.
To that end, Nara customizes specific solutions for companies across different industries. The startup says it can’t reveal which companies it works with, but CEO Jana Eggers, the one-time head of Intuit’s innovation lab, says Nara recently signed a global bank to use its tech for a variety of services: managing the institution’s reward points and recognizing customers’ preferences; assessing loan approvals based on detailed financial history; and analyzing user transactions for the bank in real-time to detect fraud. Nara also has a healthcare services company on its client roster that it assists with doctor-patient matching based on a patient’s medical history and a doctor’s academic credentials. For a major airline, Eggers says Nara is tweaking its seating system so that some empty spots can be allocated to passengers who have had an unsatisfactory experience in the past.
Thoughtful Tech
The key to Nara’s technology is personalization, Wilson says. Nara is essentially a matchmaking system that finds and understands entities in any data set, from people and places to businesses and abstract concepts, then builds a massive knowledge graph that shows weighted links between those entities. Wilson says Nara inserts users right into that knowledge graph to offer personalized recommendations. Knowing a bit about the user is what allows Nara to light up other things they might like. And the system can scrape public databases to enhance its knowledge.
Richard Socher, a former natural language processing researcher at Stanford University and current CTO of artificial intelligence startup MetaMind, says research shows this approach to AI works well for recommendation engines. Traditional approaches typically take just probability and user history into account, he says. If three people like Product A, and two of those folks also like Product B, there’s a high chance the third person will also like Product B. Nara’s approach could create more powerful nodes and more easily take external information into account, Socher says. “This could be a useful service to help other companies that can’t build their own recommendations system,” he says.
In the meantime, despite the aggressive efforts within bigger, richer companies to forge smarter AIs, Wilson says he’s not worried about possible competition. “In the scheme of things, working on artificial intelligence is not a numbers game,” Wilson says. “It’s more about careful thought with a small group of people, and technology that works thoughtfully.”
Source: http://www.wired.com/2015/05/nara-logics-ai
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Founded by Russian entrepreneur Dmitry Itskov in February 2011 with the participation of leading Russian specialists in the field of neural interfaces, robotics, artificial organs and systems.
The main goals of the 2045 Initiative: the creation and realization of a new strategy for the development of humanity which meets global civilization challenges; the creation of optimale conditions promoting the spiritual enlightenment of humanity; and the realization of a new futuristic reality based on 5 principles: high spirituality, high culture, high ethics, high science and high technologies.
The main science mega-project of the 2045 Initiative aims to create technologies enabling the transfer of a individual’s personality to a more advanced non-biological carrier, and extending life, including to the point of immortality. We devote particular attention to enabling the fullest possible dialogue between the world’s major spiritual traditions, science and society.
A large-scale transformation of humanity, comparable to some of the major spiritual and sci-tech revolutions in history, will require a new strategy. We believe this to be necessary to overcome existing crises, which threaten our planetary habitat and the continued existence of humanity as a species. With the 2045 Initiative, we hope to realize a new strategy for humanity's development, and in so doing, create a more productive, fulfilling, and satisfying future.
The "2045" team is working towards creating an international research center where leading scientists will be engaged in research and development in the fields of anthropomorphic robotics, living systems modeling and brain and consciousness modeling with the goal of transferring one’s individual consciousness to an artificial carrier and achieving cybernetic immortality.
An annual congress "The Global Future 2045" is organized by the Initiative to give platform for discussing mankind's evolutionary strategy based on technologies of cybernetic immortality as well as the possible impact of such technologies on global society, politics and economies of the future.
Future prospects of "2045" Initiative for society
2015-2020
The emergence and widespread use of affordable android "avatars" controlled by a "brain-computer" interface. Coupled with related technologies “avatars’ will give people a number of new features: ability to work in dangerous environments, perform rescue operations, travel in extreme situations etc.
Avatar components will be used in medicine for the rehabilitation of fully or partially disabled patients giving them prosthetic limbs or recover lost senses.
2020-2025
Creation of an autonomous life-support system for the human brain linked to a robot, ‘avatar’, will save people whose body is completely worn out or irreversibly damaged. Any patient with an intact brain will be able to return to a fully functioning bodily life. Such technologies will greatly enlarge the possibility of hybrid bio-electronic devices, thus creating a new IT revolution and will make all kinds of superimpositions of electronic and biological systems possible.
2030-2035
Creation of a computer model of the brain and human consciousness with the subsequent development of means to transfer individual consciousness onto an artificial carrier. This development will profoundly change the world, it will not only give everyone the possibility of cybernetic immortality but will also create a friendly artificial intelligence, expand human capabilities and provide opportunities for ordinary people to restore or modify their own brain multiple times. The final result at this stage can be a real revolution in the understanding of human nature that will completely change the human and technical prospects for humanity.
2045
This is the time when substance-independent minds will receive new bodies with capacities far exceeding those of ordinary humans. A new era for humanity will arrive! Changes will occur in all spheres of human activity – energy generation, transportation, politics, medicine, psychology, sciences, and so on.
Today it is hard to imagine a future when bodies consisting of nanorobots will become affordable and capable of taking any form. It is also hard to imagine body holograms featuring controlled matter. One thing is clear however: humanity, for the first time in its history, will make a fully managed evolutionary transition and eventually become a new species. Moreover, prerequisites for a large-scale expansion into outer space will be created as well.
Key elements of the project in the future
• International social movement
• social network immortal.me
• charitable foundation "Global Future 2045" (Foundation 2045)
• scientific research centre "Immortality"
• business incubator
• University of "Immortality"
• annual award for contribution to the realization of the project of "Immortality”.