Janelle Shane: The danger of AI is weirder than you think
While moonlighting as a research scientist, Janelle Shane found fame documenting the often hilarious antics of AI algorithms. Full bio
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all kinds of industries.
new flavors could we generate
artificial intelligence?
from Kealing Middle School
existing ice cream flavors,
to see what it would generate.
that the AI came up with.
as we might have hoped they would be.
and there was a problem?
goes wrong with AI,
the humans anymore,
thank you very much.
the AI that we actually have
new things about brains
don't measure up to real brains.
like identify a pedestrian in a picture,
of what the pedestrian is
of lines and textures and things.
do what we ask it to do?
were trying to get an AI
to get from Point A to Point B.
and solve this problem
computer program,
step-by-step instructions
into a robot with legs
to walk to Point B.
to solve the problem,
how to solve the problem,
via trial and error
to solve this particular problem
and then falls over
it's going to rebel against us,
exactly what we ask it to do.
of working with AI becomes:
so that it actually does what we want?
is being controlled by an AI.
for the robot legs
to get past all these obstacles.
with very, very strict limits
was allowed to make the legs,
to the end of that obstacle course.
to do something as simple as just walk.
you may say, OK, no fair,
a tall tower and fall over,
use legs to walk.
that doesn't always work, either.
to run facing forward
when you train AI to move fast,
and silly walks.
should have been a whole lot weirder
that AI will do if you give it a chance.
hack into the simulation's math errors
by glitching repeatedly into the floor.
with some kind of weird force of nature.
give AI the wrong problem to solve,
until something has actually gone wrong.
to copy paint colors,
here on the left.
actually came up with.
like, nice paint color names,
of letter combinations
about what words mean,
in these paint colors.
is the data that I gave it.
it doesn't know about anything else.
to do the wrong thing.
this tench in pictures.
using to identify the fish,
is a trophy fish,
that the AI had seen of this fish
aren't part of the fish.
to design an AI
what it's looking at.
the image recognition
was using Tesla's autopilot AI,
like it was designed for,
and the car failed to brake.
to recognize trucks in pictures.
trucks on highway driving,
to see trucks from behind.
to happen on a highway,
as most likely to be a road sign
from a different field.
on a résumé-sorting algorithm
had learned to discriminate against women.
on example résumés
to avoid the résumés of people
somewhere in their resume,
or "Society of Women Engineers."
to copy this particular thing
what they asked it to do.
to do the wrong thing.
and not know it.
new content in Facebook, in YouTube,
the number of clicks and views.
that they have found of doing this
of conspiracy theories or bigotry.
of what this content actually is,
of what the consequences might be
the age-old problem of communication,
how to communicate with AI.
is capable of doing and what it's not,
with its tiny little worm brain,
what we're trying to ask it to do.
to be prepared to work with AI
all-knowing AI of science fiction.
in the present day.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Janelle Shane - AI researcherWhile moonlighting as a research scientist, Janelle Shane found fame documenting the often hilarious antics of AI algorithms.
Why you should listen
Janelle Shane's humor blog, AIweirdness.com, looks at, as she tells it, "the strange side of artificial intelligence." Her upcoming book, You Look Like a Thing and I Love You: How AI Works and Why It's Making the World a Weirder Place, uses cartoons and humorous pop-culture experiments to look inside the minds of the algorithms that run our world, making artificial intelligence and machine learning both accessible and entertaining.
According to Shane, she has only made a neural network-written recipe once -- and discovered that horseradish brownies are about as terrible as you might imagine.
Janelle Shane | Speaker | TED.com