Iceland review - 2015, Side 71

Iceland review - 2015, Side 71
ICELAND REVIEW 69 MASTER AND SERVANT Mica Allan met to talk morals, machines, intelligence and ideas with Dr. Kristinn R. Þórisson, the managing director of the Icelandic Institute for Intelligent Machines (IIIM) and Associate Professor of Computer Science at Reykjavík University, learning what the IIIM is doing to further robotics and support the police in Iceland. PHOTOS BY PÁLL STEFÁNSSON. To a 25-year-old, life before the internet was an ancient time, right back there with the dinosaurs. But in a few decades, the internet could seem ancient to us all with the development of artificial intelligence (AI) and the machines it will spawn. Along with the Googles, the IBMs and the DARPAs (the United States Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency) of this world, AI research is being pursued by academics who spend their days working on algorithms and robots to shape and reach the as-yet-unknown destination that AI will take us to. One such research lab on the AI journey is the non-profit Icelandic Institute for Intelligent Machines (IIIM), based at Reykjavík University (RU). BRIDGE TO THE FUTURE IIIM is Iceland’s first independent research institute for AI, robotics and simulation, and brings together leading forces in academia and industry to foster the exchange of ideas, inventions and brainpower. Its prin- cipal partners are the School of Computer Science and the Center for Analysis and Design of Intelligent Agents; both based at RU, and funded through competitive grants and projects with industry partners, such as the Icelandic prosthetics and ortho- pedic company Össur. Dr. Kristinn R. Þórisson is the IIIM’s managing director and his background reads like something from a Dan Brown novel. He’s pioneered new ideas in commu- nicative multimodal agents at MIT and has taught advanced AI courses at Columbia, RU and the Royal Institute of Technology in Sweden. He’s also the co-founder of RU’s Centre for Analysis and Design of Intelligent Agents. His experience working in industry has seen him consult for NASA and British Telecom and he has worked with Honda on a humanoid robot, as well as creating the world’s first cognitive archi- tecture that learns complex skills by obser- vation and programming itself. In addition, he sits on the editorial board of the Journal of Artificial General Intelligence and has twice won the Kurzweil Award for his work on AI (Kurzweil is a futurist, inventor and Director of Engineering at Google, hailed by Inc. magazine as the “rightful heir to Thomas Edison.”) Kristinn started IIIM to help bridge research in two sectors that operate very differently in terms of short and long term research focus. “In academia, a year is the blink of an eye, it often takes a year or more to get your work published and academics think ten years ahead; whereas industry depends on getting operational results within two to three years at most. With an academic timeframe a company would go under in a year. So there’s this chasm between academia and industry.” Having identified this ‘chasm,’ Kristinn is optimistic that the role IIIM plays, and the work it produces, will be of valuable service to the research community in academia and industry alike. SCIENCE
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