[ExI] The present and future of AI

Jason Resch jasonresch at gmail.com
Fri Jun 12 23:36:33 UTC 2020


On Fri, Jun 12, 2020 at 5:22 PM The Avantguardian via extropy-chat <
extropy-chat at lists.extropy.org> wrote:

> I would say that we are close enough that we need to have a better
> definition of AGI. For example does a honeybee have "general intelligence"?
> If so, we are already really close because we can currently compute neural
> networks with the complexity of a honeybee brain. Assuming neuron number is
> a correlate of intelligence, it will be about 44 years until Moore's law
> reaches human brain parity. But we might reach rat or raven parity in about
> 14 years.
>
> See old thread "Benchmarking the SIngularity" for more info:
>
>  http://lists.extropy.org/pipermail/extropy-chat/2019-July/097196.html
>
>
Stuart,

Thanks for sharing that, it was very interesting.

Regarding parity of the human brain, how are you estimating the
computational complexity of the brain? The Summit supercomputer can perform
as many Ops/second as a generous estimate of total synaptic firings the
human brain can have per second.

Jason
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