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miércoles, 22 de marzo de 2023
Las nuevas y sorprendentes ideas de la IA
Las nuevas y sorprendentes ideas de la IA
La polinización cruzada de la IA con otras disciplinas está dando lugar a nuevas y sorprendentes vías de investigación.
Cuando Yoshiho Ikeuchi se incorporó al Institute for AI and Beyond de la Universidad de Tokio, él y sus colegas desarrollaron una forma innovadora de construir modelos diminutos de circuitos cerebrales a partir de tejido neuronal en el laboratorio.
After
completing his PhD at the University of Tokyo in 2007, Ikeuchi worked
in a post-doctoral position in cellular neuroscience in the United
States. When he returned to the University of Tokyo seven years later,
he collaborated with engineering colleagues to grow neural organoids —
neural tissue generated from human stem cells — in silicon rubber
moulds.
Ikeuchi could see potential in marrying engineering and
biology. But it wasn’t until he arrived at the Institute for AI and
Beyond, in 2020, that his research expanded and evolved in an unexpected
direction, resulting in an unprecedentedly rich model of neural
function that connects AI with biology.
The model is comprised of
two organoids-on-a-chip connected by a narrow channel. Axons, fibres
which extend from neuron cells and connect to others, grow through the
channel from one organoid to the other, forming a rudimentary version of
complex brain circuit architecture.
Transformative institute
This
miniature brain model is designed to exist inside a closed AI loop. AI
sends signals to one organoid via an electrode array and records and
analyses the response of the other. It allows Ikeuchi to exert control
over the stimulus and to detect and analyse output that would otherwise
be too complex to comprehend.
Ikeuchi attributes this innovative
model to the unique interdisciplinary nature of research at the
Institute for AI and Beyond. For him, the impact of working at the
Institute, has been “professionally transformative,” fundamentally
changing his sense of what is possible.
Founded in May 2020 by the University of Tokyo and SoftBank,
the institute has already proven itself as a centre of excellence and
innovation. Dedicated to creating a dynamic exchange between AI research
and industry, it supports mid-and long-term research projects that
explore all aspects of AI, its industry and research applications,
impact on society, and the research horizons of AI itself. The institute
also supports more practical research projects, called high-cycle
projects, that aim to establish AI companies in a few years and
eventually create a business ecosystem consisting of the University of
Tokyo, SoftBank and related companies.
The institute’s faculty
reflects AI’s rapid evolution and ability to affect many different parts
of society and different fields of research. Aside from neuroscientists
such as Ikeuchi, it is also home to engineers, astrophysicists, quantum
mechanics experts and social historians.
Like Ikeuchi, physicist,
Eiji Saitoh, also began his research heading in a different direction
to his current work. Saitoh trained in spintronics, but over time became
increasingly interested in quantum mechanics.
Beyond human limits
Quantum
mechanics posed a greater challenge to Saitoh, as current scientific
understanding cannot fully account for the behaviour of the subatomic
world, which is simultaneously wave-like and particle-like. Currently,
he says, the quantum realm is “beyond human understanding,” which is why
AI has great potential for the field.
AI has an enormous capacity
to analyse complexity, he explains, meaning it could act as an
interpreter to help us decipher the quantum world. To this end Saitoh is
focused on building a human and AI collaboration.
He’s using this
technology to understand the interference caused by small structural
defects in the electric conductance of nano-metals, such as copper or
aluminium. Previously the effect of such interference was thought to be
too random to be analysed, but Saitoh used AI to find and study patterns
in the ‘noise’, creating what he calls a quantum fingerprint.
By
using AI in this way, Saitoh says, researchers can build useful
generalizations about the quantum world. Such insights have practical
applications, such as helping to develop better quantum computers.
Furthermore, he believes, human logic combined with AI “leaps of
understanding” will make it possible to eventually formulate a new
physics that will describe both the subatomic and the ordinary worlds,
in a way that humans can comprehend.
Projects such as Saitoh’s and
Ikeuchi’s may have practical applications, but the research of the
Institute for AI and Beyond is not only dictated by business interests.
The freedom and collaborative opportunities it has given both
researchers has greatly expanded their research horizons. Now because
Saitoh’s ambitious work is supported by the Institute, he hopes to be
able to change not just the way we understand physics, but to push the
limits of what AI itself can achieve.
AI’s glamorous aura
Yuko
Itatsu, a social and cultural historian, heads up the institute’s
humanities and social science project. Her goal is to explore both the
way in which AI is used within society and the impact that it has on
society. There is “a glamorous aura to AI in Japan,” she explains, but
engaging with colleagues at the institute has helped her to develop a
more realistic understanding of the technology.
Part of her
project is to monitor the effect of AI and ensure it doesn’t exacerbate
existing social issues and inequalities based on gender, race,
sexuality, disability, and wealth disparity. For example, Itatsu
mentions widespread concerns about the way that face-recognition and
surveillance technology may replicate the racial biases of society. Even
within the AI-research community, Itatsu observes that most researchers
are men. The field includes only a small percentage of women, a figure
that she says is not expected to change in the next 10 years. She says
it is important to monitor how AI research develops and track the
potential impact of that skewed representation.
Using the
multi-disciplinary resources of the institute, Itatsu has brought
together researchers including media specialists, historians, cultural
anthropologists, linguists and scientists to collaborate on an
international comparative study. Globally, “there is a naive idea that
AI exists in a kind of abstract neutral space,” she argues, but AI
emerges from the society that creates it, and all over the world AI is
shaped by distinctly different cultural assumptions and funding
contexts, which she believes should be made explicit.
“We are not
watchdogs,” she clarifies. “But we want to see how AI can be used in a
positive way to change stigma and mitigate discrimination”.
Diálogo interdisciplinar
El objetivo último de Itatsu es crear un foro de diálogo verdaderamente interdisciplinar sobre la IA. Su laboratorio ya ha preparado un libro recopilatorio de ensayos que será uno de los primeros de este tipo en Japón. Fiel al espíritu de su laboratorio, la colección de Itatsu incluye trabajos de un amplio abanico de investigadores y, lo que es igualmente importante, ha sido escrita para el público, no para una audiencia reducida y especializada.
"La única forma de mitigar el sesgo algorítmico es asegurarse de que el diálogo sobre la IA sea compartido por la sociedad en general", afirma. Cuando el público en general entienda lo que puede hacer la IA, podrá exigir responsabilidades a gobiernos y empresas".
El trabajo de Itatsu, Saitoh e Ikeuchi, así como de los numerosos investigadores del Institute for AI and Beyond, promete seguir impulsando la investigación de la IA en direcciones sorprendentes y apasionantes.
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