Georgia Institute of Technology researchers are exploring and pushing the boundaries of artificial intelligence (AI) by partnering with one of AI’s most notable citizens — IBM’s Watson — to advance how computers could help humans creatively solve problems in a wide variety of professions.
“Searching Google still requires a lot of search,” says Ashok Goel, professor at Georgia Tech’s School of Interactive Computing. “Imagine if you could ask Google a complicated question and it immediately responded with your answer — not just a list of links to manually open. That’s what we did with Watson.”
Watson was trained by student teams in a class at Georgia Tech using 1,200 question-answer pairs (200 for each of six teams), which allowed them to “chat” with Watson and seek out inspiration for big design challenges in areas such as engineering, architecture, systems, and computing. The teams worked with the AI to learn about solutions that could be replicated from the natural world — something known as biologically inspired design — after first feeding Watson several hundred biology articles from Biologue, an interactive biology repository. Teams then posed questions to Watson about the research it had learned.
Questions included, “How do you make a better desalination process for consuming sea water?” Animals, it turns out, have a variety of answers for this, such as how seagulls filter out seawater salt through special glands. Another question asked, “How can manufacturers develop better solar cells for long-term space travel?” One answer: Replicate how plants in harsh climates use high-temperature fibrous insulation material to regulate temperature. IBM’s Watson quickly culled answers for students from the Biologue articles in a fraction of a second.
Watson effectively acted as an intelligent sounding board to steer students through what would otherwise be a daunting task of parsing a wide volume of research that may fall outside their expertise. This approach to using Watson could assist professionals in a variety of fields by allowing them to ask questions and receive answers as quickly as in natural conversation to help with problem solving.
Georgia Tech discovered that Watson’s ability to retrieve natural language information would allow a novice to quickly “train up” about complex topics and better determine whether their idea or hypothesis is worth pursuing.
The students call their technique “GT-Watson Plus,” a moniker that implies the system’s advanced capabilities. In addition to the ability to “chat” on a topic, this version of Watson prompts users with alternate ways to ask questions for better results. Those results are packaged in an intuitive presentation — visualized as a “treetop” where each answer is a “leaf” that varies in size based on its weighted importance. This allows the average person to navigate results more easily on a given topic.
“Researchers are provided a quickly digestible visual map of the concepts relevant to the query and the degree to which they are relevant,” says Goel, who taught the course. “We were able to add more semantic and contextual meaning to Watson to give some notion of a conversation with the AI.”
Read more: Georgia Tech trains Watson AI to ‘chat,’ spark more creativity in humans
The Latest on: Watson AI
[google_news title=”” keyword=”Watson AI” num_posts=”10″ blurb_length=”0″ show_thumb=”left”]
via Google News
The Latest on: Watson AI
- AI is evolving and investors need to change with it. Here’s what to expect.on April 27, 2024 at 4:58 am
Continuous education and advocacy for responsible AI development are essential for both investors and industry stakeholders. Investors should actively engage in discussions surrounding AI ethics, ...
- WTW's AI tool is changing how employers survey their workforceon April 26, 2024 at 1:53 pm
The new generative AI assistant aims to provide leaders with data-based actionable changes they can make to improve employee experience.
- Why IBM’s dazzling Watson supercomputer was a lousy tutoron April 26, 2024 at 2:00 am
With a new race underway to create the next teaching chatbot, IBM’s abandoned 5-year education push offers lessons about AI’s limits.
- MIT Engineers Unveil Chip Boosting Smartphone AI and Security, Balancing Efficiency with Data Protectionon April 25, 2024 at 10:21 pm
MIT engineers developed a chip to protect personal data and enhance AI applications' efficiency in health-monitoring apps.
- Elon Musk's chilling AI claim could come to fruition with huge 'Matrix' investmenton April 23, 2024 at 5:38 am
Elon Musk's prediction that AI will outsmart humans by 2025 could come true, according to tech expert Nell Watson, if the industry had a massive cash injection ...
- AWS moves Amazon Bedrock’s AI guardrails, and other features to general availabilityon April 23, 2024 at 5:06 am
The updates include new large language models and a capability to import custom models, which is currently in preview.
- Is AI Finally a Way to Reduce Higher Ed Costs?on April 23, 2024 at 12:06 am
AI could free up faculty time to focus on the teaching and relationship-building that matter most, José Antonio Bowen and C. Edward Watson write.
- Quantum Computers Can Now Run Powerful AI That Works like the Brainon April 22, 2024 at 5:30 am
Seven years later the transformer, which enables ChatGPT and other chatbots to quickly generate sophisticated outputs in reply to user prompts, is the dynamo powering the ongoing AI boom. As ...
- Researchers warn of unchecked toxicity in AI language modelson April 21, 2024 at 2:20 pm
Researchers from Improbable AI Lab at MIT and the MIT-IBM Watson AI Lab are deploying machine learning to fix this problem, developing a “red-team language model” specifically designed to generate ...
- Nvidia’s AI Bot Outperforms Nurses, Study Finds. Here’s What It Means.on April 17, 2024 at 1:30 am
The chip maker claims its generative AI “agents” surpass human nurses in performing a variety of tasks, all at a markedly reduced cost. Here are three implications.
via Bing News