2.1 Evolution of AI
Artificial Intelligence (AI)
Think of AI like a very smart assistant. Just like a personal assistant helps you by remembering your schedule, finding information, and making recommendations, AI helps machines do similar tasks. It's like giving your computer a brain to understand and help you with everyday tasks.
AI is not a new concept. But recent advances in "generative AI" have impacted our everyday life so deeply that if feels like it just came out of "nowhere". Let's review a history of major AI advances over the years:
Early Foundations (1940s - 1950s)
Turing Test (1950): Proposed by Alan Turing, this test assesses a machine's ability to exhibit intelligent behavior indistinguishable from that of a human.
Logic Theorist (1956): Created by Allen Newell and Herbert A. Simon, it is considered the first AI program, capable of proving mathematical theorems.
The Birth of AI (1950s - 1960s)
Dartmouth Conference (1956): John McCarthy, Marvin Minsky, Nathaniel Rochester, and Claude Shannon coined the term "artificial intelligence" and organized this conference, marking the birth of AI as a field.
Perceptron (1957):An early neural network model developed by Frank Rosenblatt, laying the groundwork for modern neural networks.
Expansion and Setbacks (1970s - 1980s)
Expert Systems (1970s): AI systems that emulate the decision-making ability of a human expert, like MYCIN for diagnosing bacterial infections.
AI Winter (1980s): A period of reduced funding and interest in AI due to unmet expectations and the limitations of early AI systems.
Resurgence and Growth (1990s - 2000s)
Deep Blue (1997): IBM's chess-playing computer defeated world champion Garry Kasparov, showcasing the potential of AI in complex games.
DARPA Grand Challenge (2004): Autonomous vehicles competed to navigate a desert course, spurring advancements in self-driving technology.
Modern AI (2010s - Present)
Deep Learning (2010s): The resurgence of neural networks with multiple layers, or deep learning, led to breakthroughs in image and speech recognition. Notable systems include Google's DeepMind and OpenAI's GPT series.
AlphaGo (2016): DeepMind's AI defeated the world champion Go player Lee Sedol, demonstrating advanced capabilities in handling complex tasks.
GPT-3 (2020): OpenAI's language model capable of generating human-like text based on deep learning techniques, highlighting advancements in natural language processing.
GPT-4o (July 2024): This is the most current generative AI language model