How AI can learn from animal behavior | Seyedali Mirjalili | TEDxSydney
HTML-код
- Опубликовано: 1 июн 2024
- Nature has developed resilient systems of intelligence throughout the millions of species that have evolved throughout time - so how can we design AI Intelligence to help us harnesses nature’s intelligence?
Professor Seyedali (Ali) Mirjalili is a global leader in the field of AI. As a child, he was intrigued by the natural world and would spend hours watching the ants in his backyard, searching for food, and solving problems as a collective. His work focuses on AI models inspired by nature, including complex intelligence systems of Wolf packs, Ant colonies, and Bird flocks. Professor Seyedali Mirjalili is the director of the Center for Artificial Intelligence Research and Optimization at Torrens University. He has gained international recognition for his contributions to nature-inspired artificial intelligence techniques, with over 500 published works that have received more than 80,000 citations and an H-index of 90. He has been on the list of the top 1% of highly-cited researchers since 2019, and the Web of Science named him one of the most influential researchers in the world. In 2022 and 2023, The Australian newspaper recognized him as a global leader in Artificial Intelligence and a national leader in the Evolutionary Computation and Fuzzy Systems fields.
He is a senior member of IEEE and holds editorial positions at several top AI journals, including Engineering Applications of Artificial Intelligence, Applied Soft Computing, Neurocomputing, Advances in Engineering Software, Computers in Biology and Medicine, Healthcare Analytics, Applied Intelligence, and Decision Analytics. This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at www.ted.com/tedx
This is actually a really helpful and creative method to take advantage of what we have learned from animals. It's like looking forward with the lens of our prehistory.
I can't stop watching - it's that good.
Michael Crichton wrote a book about this, Prey. It has scenes that are eerily similar to how he describes AI. That wolf scene is almost verbatim to the part of the book where the main character is hunted by a nanomachine swarm. I encourage you all to check out the book, it really shows you how scary this technology is.
You maybe right , but average BLOKE ain't understanding AI UNTIL IT'S TO LATE
Some scientists, especially those far from the natural field, forget that they know almost nothing about nature.
Good performance
Hey, that was pretty cool and the argument seems sound. I dig it a lot!
"We are an unfinished product of an evolution that is yet to be." ~ Teilhard de Chardin ~
So amazing
And me wait your comments on this video
No ants were harmed in this making of this TedTalk
Many thanks. Great speech!
Teaching a machine to act like an animal. What could go wrong?
Absolutely nothing 😂💀💀💀
Teaching an animal to act like a machine , replaces your employment
What a crazy guy!
Hes handsome
I all time wait this Chennal video 😊
No matter how good it is
Still AI
sad thing when you sign up any flat form it will verify are you not a robot.
Nice
that was a damn fine ted talk, applicable to much more than tech of any sort.
perhaps we should look to nature for the basis of almost everything.
What do I think of this 😢a real mess
Nature is not artificial
The floor is made out of floor
Very true nature is not artificial.
Idk what the point you're trying to make here
@@jefecker1no, it is made out of lava.
Nothing technically is artificial. It comes from another idea or a long time discovered creation
What do you learn from an insect that lives 2wks. Then dies
Animals are smart.
Animals are geniuses they never get obese, and live by nature's motto kill or be killed unlike whimps in this country
He has comment.nature is not artical,all are known.
Even he doesn't understand the intelligence part of AI...
And that's supposed to be a Ted talk. 😅
You've misinterpreted it, he rather focuses on the subjectivity of intelligence which is to vast to be caged by an individualistic approach to a master mind
@@3soter1c I now that my dear. He admits his fears regarding normal AI too tho and these fears are not making any sense. He either didn't understand the subject or he doesn't understand his own fears.
I don’t want AI to learn from animal behavior. I just want AI to go away.
What's this guy know about nature, he's never even taken a walk outside
Simply awful