Preface
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 19 January 2017
Summary
The quintessence of intelligence is one of the big questions still beyond our understanding. In the past, science has unravelled many other previously puzzling questions through measurement, a fundamental tool for the identification, comparison and classification of natural phenomena. Not surprisingly, a very significant portion of our still scant knowledge about what intelligence is – and what it is not – comes from this measurement effort. For more than a century, psychometrics, comparative psychology and other disciplines have developed a rich collection of measurement instruments for quantifying various behavioural properties in the animal kingdom, prominently placing humans as a yardstick.
Beyond the enormous landscape of behaviours in the animal kingdom, there is yet another gigantic space to be explored: the machine kingdom. A plethora of new types of ‘creatures’ is emerging: robots, animats, chatbots, digital assistants, social bots, automated avatars and artificial life forms, to name a few, including hybrids and collectives, such as machine-enhanced humans, cyborgs, artificial swarms, human computation systems and crowd computing platforms. These systems display behaviours and capabilities as peculiar as their developers and constituents can contrive. Universal psychometrics presents itself as a new area dealing with the measurement of behavioural features in the machine kingdom, which comprises any interactive system, biological, artificial or hybrid, individual or collective.
The focus on an enlarged set of subjects generates plenty of new questions and opportunities. Are IQ tests valid for arbitrary machines? Can we devise universal cognitive tests? Can we have a formal definition of intelligence solely based on computational principles? Can the structure of cognitive abilities and empirical latent factors, including the dominant g factor, be extrapolated beyond biological creatures? Can this be studied theoretically? How should artificial personalities be measured? Do we need intelligence to evaluate intelligence universally? The classical paradigms used to evaluate natural and artificial systems have not been able to answer (or even formulate) these questions precisely. Also, customary evaluation tools are gamed by these new kinds of systems.
Recently, however, there has been a significant progress in a principled approach to the evaluation of behaviour based on information theory and computation. The anthropocentric stance is replaced by a universal perspective where life forms are considered as particular cases. Classical tools in human psychometrics, comparative psychology and animal cognition are not jettisoned but rethought for a wider landscape and substantiated on algorithmic grounds.
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- Information
- The Measure of All MindsEvaluating Natural and Artificial Intelligence, pp. xi - xviPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2017