DocumentCode
983501
Title
Asimov´s laws of robotics: Implications for information technology. 2
Author
Clarke, Roger
Author_Institution
Nat. Australian Univ., Canberra, ACT, Australia
Volume
27
Issue
1
fYear
1994
fDate
1/1/1994 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
57
Lastpage
66
Abstract
For part 1 see ibid., Dec 1993, p53-61. Isaac Asimov´s Laws of Robotics, first formulated in 1940. were primarily a literary device intended to support a series of stories about robot behavior. Over time, he found that the three Laws included enough apparent inconsistencies, ambiguity. and uncertainty to provide the conflicts required for a great many stories. In examining the ramifications of these laws. Asimov revealed problems that might later confront real roboticists and information technologists attempting to establish rules for the behavior of intelligent machines. As information technology evolves and machines begin to design and build other machines, the issue of human control gains greater significance. In time, human values tend to change; the rules reflecting these values, and embedded in existing robotic devices, may need to be modified. But if they are implicit rather than explicit, with their effects scattered widely across a system, they may not be easily replaceable. Asimov himself discovered many contradictions and eventually revised the Laws of Robotics
Keywords
robots; social aspects of automation; Isaac Asimov; Laws of Robotics; human control; information technologists; information technology; intelligent machines; robot behavior; roboticists; Heart; Humans; Information technology; Intelligent robots; Machine intelligence; Protection; Robot sensing systems; Scattering; Testing; Uncertainty;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Computer
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9162
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/2.248881
Filename
248881
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