AI effect

The AI effect is the discounting of the behavior of an artificial-intelligence program as not "real" intelligence.[1]

The author Pamela McCorduck writes: "It's part of the history of the field of artificial intelligence that every time somebody figured out how to make a computer do something—play good checkers, solve simple but relatively informal problems—there was a chorus of critics to say, 'that's not thinking'."[2]

Researcher Rodney Brooks complains: "Every time we figure out a piece of it, it stops being magical; we say, 'Oh, that's just a computation.'"[3]

  1. ^ Haenlein, Michael; Kaplan, Andreas (2019). "A Brief History of Artificial Intelligence: On the Past, Present, and Future of Artificial Intelligence". California Management Review. 61 (4): 5–14. doi:10.1177/0008125619864925. S2CID 199866730.
  2. ^ McCorduck 2004, p. 204
  3. ^ Kahn, Jennifer (March 2002). "It's Alive". Wired. Vol. 10, no. 30. Retrieved 24 Aug 2008.

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