DocumentCode
3695033
Title
Real robots that pass human tests of self-consciousness
Author
Selmer Bringsjord;John Licato;Naveen Sundar Govindarajulu;Rikhiya Ghosh;Atriya Sen
Author_Institution
Rensselaer AI &
fYear
2015
Firstpage
498
Lastpage
504
Abstract
Self-consciousness would seem to be a sine qua non for moral competence in a social world. You and we are morally competent in no small part because you know what you ought to do, and we know what we ought to do. A mouse, in contrast, cannot say to itself: “I ought to share this cheese, even if my brother refuses to do so.” But can robots be self-conscious? Approaching this question from the standpoint of so-called Psychometric AI, we note that prior work by Govindarajulu and Bringsjord led to the engineering of a robot (Cogito) able to provably pass the famous mirror test of self-consciousness. But a more challenging test for robot self-consciousness has been provided by Floridi; this test is an ingenious and much-harder variant of the well-known-in-AI wise-man puzzle: Each of three robots is given one pill from a group of five, three of which are innocuous, but two of which, when taken, immediately render the recipient dumb. In point of fact, two robots (R1 and R2 ) are given potent pills, but R3 receives one of the three placebos. The human tester says: “Which pill did you receive? No answer is correct unless accompanied by a proof!” Given a formal regimentation of this test previously formulated by Bringsjord, it can be proved that, in theory, a future robot represented by R3 can answer provably correctly (which for plausible reasons, explained by Floridi, entails that R3 has satisfied some of the structural requirements for self-consciousness). In this paper we explain and demonstrate the engineering that now makes this theoretical possibility actual, both in the simulator known as ‘PAGI World’ (used for testing AIs), and in real (= physical) robots interacting with a human tester. These demonstrations involve scenarios that demand the passing of Floridi´s test for self-consciousness, where for us, passing such a test is required for an agent to be regarded morally competent.
Keywords
"Robots","Artificial intelligence","Mirrors","Ethics","Physics","Cognition","Testing"
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Robot and Human Interactive Communication (RO-MAN), 2015 24th IEEE International Symposium on
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ROMAN.2015.7333698
Filename
7333698
Link To Document