Types of Intelligence


Types of Intelligence

There are four types of artificial intelligence, as follows:

1. Reactive machines

The most basic types of AI programs only work, and they have the ability not 666666to build memories or use past experiences to inform current decisions. Deep Blue, a great chess-playing computer game, which struck international grandmaster Garry Kasparov in the late 1990s, is a perfect example of this type of machine. Deep Blue can point to the pieces on the chessboard and know how each one goes. It can make predictions about what action to follow, and its opponent. And it can choose the best move between opportunities.

2. Limited memory

This category II has machines that can look past. Self-driving cars do some of this. For example, they check the speed and direction of other vehicles. That will not be done in a matter of seconds, but rather it will need to be identified and monitored over time. These comments may be added to the predetermined rules for self-driving vehicles, including line markings, traffic lights, and other essential features, such as curves. They are installed when the vehicle decides to change lanes to avoid cutting off another driver or being struck by a nearby vehicle.

3. Theory of mind

We can stop here and call this point an essential difference between the equipment we have and the equipment we will build in the future. However, it is better to specify in detail the types of delivery equipment he needs to build and what he needs to be about. The following, state-of-the-art equipment, class builds not only presentations about the world but also by other agents or organizations around the world. In psychology, this is called the "theory of mind" - the understanding that people, creatures, and things in the world can have thoughts and feelings that affect their behavior.

4. Self-awareness

The final step in AI development is to build systems that can make presentations for them. Ultimately, AI researchers will have to understand knowledge and build the equipment it has. This is, in a way, an extension of "psychological theory" with the implantation of type III implants. Awareness is also called "self-awareness" for a reason. ("I want that thing" is a very different statement from "I know I want that thing." We think so