Month: August 2023

The “Adjacent Possible” – and How It Explains Human Innovation | Stuart Kauffman | TED


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From the astonishing evolutionary advances of the Cambrian explosion to our present-day computing revolution, the trend of dramatic growth after periods of stability can be explained through the theory of the “adjacent possible,” says theoretical biologist Stuart Kauffman. Tracing the arc of human history through the tools and technologies we’ve invented, he explains the impact human ingenuity has had on the planet — and calls for a shift towards more protection for all life on Earth.

Watch at: www.youtube.com

Biology in AI: New Frontiers in Hardware, Software, and Wetware Modeling of Cognition

Luisa Damiano, Pasquale Stano

Artificial Life (2023) 29 (3): 289–292.

The proposal for this special issue was inspired by the main themes around which we organize a series of satellite workshops at Artificial Life conferences (including some of the latest European Conferences on Artificial Life), the title of which is “SB-AI: What can Synthetic Biology (SB) offer to Artificial Intelligence (AI)?” The workshop themes are part of a larger scenario in which we are interested and which we intend to develop. This scenario includes the entire taxonomy of new research frontiers generated within AI, based on the construction and experimental exploration of software, hardware, wetware, and mixed synthetic models to deepen the scientific understanding of biological cognition.

Read the full article at: direct.mit.edu

Artificial intelligence is ineffective and potentially harmful for fact checking

Matthew R. DeVerna, Harry Yaojun Yan, Kai-Cheng Yang, Filippo Menczer

Fact checking can be an effective strategy against misinformation, but its implementation at scale is impeded by the overwhelming volume of information online. Recent artificial intelligence (AI) language models have shown impressive ability in fact-checking tasks, but how humans interact with fact-checking information provided by these models is unclear. Here we investigate the impact of fact checks generated by a popular AI model on belief in, and sharing intent of, political news in a preregistered randomized control experiment. Although the AI performs reasonably well in debunking false headlines, we find that it does not significantly affect participants’ ability to discern headline accuracy or share accurate news. However, the AI fact-checker is harmful in specific cases: it decreases beliefs in true headlines that it mislabels as false and increases beliefs for false headlines that it is unsure about. On the positive side, the AI increases sharing intents for correctly labeled true headlines. When participants are given the option to view AI fact checks and choose to do so, they are significantly more likely to share both true and false news but only more likely to believe false news. Our findings highlight an important source of potential harm stemming from AI applications and underscore the critical need for policies to prevent or mitigate such unintended consequences.

Read the full article at: arxiv.org

Complexity Theory’s 50-Year Journey to the Limits of Knowledge

How hard is it to prove that problems are hard to solve? Meta-complexity theorists have been asking questions like this for decades. A string of recent results has started to deliver answers.

Read the full article at: www.quantamagazine.org

Multilevel cultural evolution: From new theory to practical applications

David Sloan Wilson, Guru Madhavan, Michele J. Gelfand, Steven C. Hayes, Paul W. B. Atkins, and Rita R. Colwell

PNAS 120 (16) e2218222120

Evolutionary science has led to many practical applications of genetic evolution but few practical uses of cultural evolution. This is because the entire study of evolution was gene centric for most of the 20th century, relegating the study and application of human cultural change to other disciplines. The formal study of human cultural evolution began in the 1970s and has matured to the point of deriving practical applications. We provide an overview of these developments and examples for the topic areas of complex systems science and engineering, economics and business, mental health and well-being, and global change efforts.

Read the full article at: www.pnas.org