4.3 • 1.2K Ratings
🗓️ 19 February 2024
⏱️ 28 minutes
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Humans have a long-held fascination with the idea of Artificial Intelligence (AI) as a dystopian threat - from Mary Shelley's Frankenstein, through to the Terminator movies. But somehow, we still often think of this technology as 'futuristic', whereas in fact, it's already woven into the fabric of our daily lives, from facial recognition software to translator apps.
And if we get too caught up in the entertaining sci-fi narrative around AI and the potential threat from machines, there is a more pressing danger that we overlook real and present concerns - from deep fakes to electoral disinformation.
Michael Wooldridge is determined to demystify AI and explain how it can improve our lives, in a whole host of different ways. A professor of Computer Science at the University of Oxford, and the director of Foundational AI Research at the Alan Turing Institute, Mike believes the most common fears around this technology are "misplaced".
In a special 300th edition of The Life Scientific, recorded in front of an audience at London's Royal Institution (RI), Mike tells Jim al-Khalili how he will use this year's prestigious RI Christmas Lectures to lift the lid on modern AI technology and discuss how far it could go in future. Mike also reminiscences about the days when sending an email was a thrilling novelty, discusses why people love talking to him about the Terminator at parties, and is even challenged to think up a novel future use of AI by ChatGPT.
Presenter: Jim al-Khalili Producer: Lucy Taylor Audio editor: Sophie Ormiston Production co-ordinator: Jonathan Harris
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0:00.0 | BBC Sounds. |
0:02.0 | Hello everyone, it's Michelle Vassage, and welcome to my podcast Rule Breakers. |
0:06.0 | But you'll sit down and be bright. |
0:08.0 | Celebrating women's voices. |
0:10.0 | You're very welcome to now you're asking with me, Marion Keys Keys and me Tara Flynn. |
0:14.7 | This is juicy. No limits, no limits. |
0:17.1 | Celebrating women. |
0:18.6 | Where to be a woman is the podcast celebrating the best of women's well-being. We're on a quest to find out |
0:24.4 | where in the world women are living their best lives. Celebrate yourself. |
0:28.5 | Lesson on BBC Sounds. We lost our humanity. We lost our dignity. We got punished for something we did not do. |
0:38.2 | Amazing sports stories from the BBC World Service tells the story of The Black Fourteen. |
0:43.9 | Our young lives were flipped upside down. |
0:46.2 | Search for amazing sports stories wherever you get your BBC podcasts. |
0:50.4 | Hello and welcome to our 300th life scientific coming to you complete with |
0:55.2 | audience from London's Royal Institution a center of scientific education and |
0:59.8 | celebration for more than two centuries. Hopefully today we're contributing a little bit towards that grand tradition. |
1:06.0 | Now, I propose to consider the question, |
1:10.0 | can machines think? |
1:12.0 | Those aren't actually my words. |
1:13.7 | That question was the opening line of a paper written in 1950 |
1:17.3 | by the great British computer scientist Alan Turing, |
1:20.3 | leading to the test for machine sentience known as the Turing test. |
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