Monday 5th January - 05:20 PM GMT
Jürgen Schmidhuber on AI, Intelligence, and the Future of Scientific Discovery
How machines learn to model the world
Jürgen Schmidhuber, pioneer of modern artificial intelligence and long-time advocate of self-improving learning systems, argues that intelligence, human or artificial, arises from systems that learn to predict and compress the world, and then use those models to create ever more intelligent behaviour. In his view, the universe may be seen as a computable system whose complexity and our ability to model it drive intelligence and discovery.
In this opening interview, Schmidhuber will explore how AI systems that model, simulate and compress reality fit into our evolving understanding of scientific method and truth in an age of simulations. Are these systems merely reproducing human biases via their models, or can they genuinely uncover deeper structure in the world? Join Jürgen Schmidhuber to discuss what it means for intelligence, creativity and science when our theories and simulations increasingly dominate our interaction with reality.
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Jürgen Schmidhuber
Jürgen Schmidhuber is a German computer scientist and a seminal figure in artificial intelligence. He is the Scientific Director of the Swiss AI Lab IDSIA and co‑Chair of the Centre of Excellence for Generative AI at King Abdullah University of Science and Technology.
Schmidhuber is best known for his foundational contributions to deep learning neural networks: his work on the Long Short‑Term Memory architecture revolutionised how sequential data are processed. He has authored hundreds of peer‑reviewed papers and has been widely recognised for his impact, receiving awards such as the Helmholtz Prize and the IEEE Neural Networks Pioneer Award.