Google DeepMind Researches Why Robots Kill or Cooperate

Advertisement
By Jeremy Kahn, Bloomberg | Updated: 10 February 2017 10:23 IST
Google DeepMind Researches Why Robots Kill or Cooperate

When our robot overlords arrive, will they decide to kill us or cooperate with us?

New research from DeepMind, Alphabet Inc.'s London-based artificial intelligence unit could ultimately shed light on this fundamental question.

They have been investigating the conditions in which reward-optimising beings, whether human or robot, would chose to cooperate, rather than compete. The answer could have implications for how computer intelligence may eventually be deployed to manage complex systems such as an economy, city traffic flows, or environmental policy.

Joel Leibo, the lead author of a paper DeepMind published online Thursday, said in an email that his team's research indicates that whether agents learn to cooperate or compete depends strongly on the environment in which they operate.

Advertisement

While the research has no immediate real-world application, it would help DeepMind design artificial intelligence agents that can work together in environments with imperfect information. In the future, such work could help such agents navigate a world full of intelligent entities - both human and machine - whether in transport networks or stock markets.

Google's DeepMind AI Said to Outperform Professional Lip-Readers

DeepMind's paper describes how researchers used two different games to investigate how software agents learn to compete or cooperate.

Advertisement

In the first, two of these agents had to maximize the number of apples they could gather in a two-dimensional digital environment. Researchers could vary how frequently apples appeared. The researchers found that when apples were scarce, the agents quickly learned to attack one another -- zapping, or "tagging" their opponent with a ray that temporarily immobilized them. When apples were abundant, the agents preferred to co-exist more peacefully.

Rather chillingly, however, the researchers found when they tried this same game with more intelligent agents that drew on larger neural networks, a kind of machine intelligence designed to mimic how certain parts of the human brain work -- they would "try to tag the other agent more frequently, i.e. behave less cooperatively, no matter how we vary the scarcity of apples," they wrote in a blog post on DeepMind's website.

Advertisement

In a second game, called Wolfpack, the AI agents played wolves that had to learn to capture "prey." Success resulted in a reward not just for the wolf making the capture, but for all wolves present within a certain radius of the capture. The more wolves present in this capture radius, the more points all the wolves would receive.

In this game, the agents generally learned to cooperate. Unlike in the apple-gathering game, in Wolfpack the more cognitively advanced the agent was, the better it learned to cooperate. The researchers postulate that this is because in the apple-gathering game, the zapping behavior was more complex - it requiring aiming the beam at the opponent; while in Wolfpack game, cooperation was the more complex behavior.

The researchers speculated that because the less sophisticated artificial intelligence systems had more difficulty mastering these complex behaviors, the more simple AI couldn't learn to use them effectively.

DeepMind, which Google purchased in 2014, is best known for having created an artificial intelligence that can beat the world's top human players in the ancient Asian strategy game Go. In November, DeepMind announced it was working with Blizzard Entertainment Inc., the division of Activision Blizzard that makes the video game Starcraft II, to turn that game into a platform for AI research.

Leibo said that the agents used in the apple-gathering and Wolfpack experiments had no short-term memory, and as a result could not make any inferences about the intent of the other agent. "Going forward it would be interesting to equip agents with the ability to reason about other agent's beliefs and goals," he said.

In the meantime, it might be wise to keep a few spare apples around.

© 2017 Bloomberg L.P.

 

For the latest tech news and reviews, follow Gadgets 360 on X, Facebook, WhatsApp, Threads and Google News. For the latest videos on gadgets and tech, subscribe to our YouTube channel. If you want to know everything about top influencers, follow our in-house Who'sThat360 on Instagram and YouTube.

Advertisement

Related Stories

Popular Mobile Brands
  1. iPhone 17 Pro, iPhone 17 Pro Max Alleged Geekbench Listing Leaked
  2. Titan: The OceanGate Disaster Now Streaming on Netflix: What You Need to Know
  3. Sony Announces Limited-Period Discount on Audio Products in India
  4. Realme 15 Pro Tipped to Launch in India in These Colour Options
  5. OnePlus 13s Sale Starts Today in India: Check Price and Offers
  6. Stellar Blade Becomes Sony's Biggest Single-Player PC Launch Ever
  7. Disney, Universal Sue Image Creator Midjourney for Copyright Infringement
  1. Hubble Finds Cosmic Dust Coating Uranus’ Moons, Not Radiation Scars
  2. New Theory Challenges Black Hole Singularities, But Critics Raise Red Flags
  3. Solar Orbiter Captures First-Ever Close-Up of Sun’s South Pole, Revealing Magnetic Field Chaos
  4. The Summer I Turned Pretty Season 3 OTT Release Date: When and Where to Watch Final Season Online?
  5. Mokshapatam Hindi OTT Release: Where to Watch it Online?
  6. Titan: The OceanGate Disaster Now Streaming on Netflix: What You Need to Know
  7. Stellar Blade Becomes Sony's Biggest Single-Player Steam Launch Ever a Day After PC Release
  8. Microsoft 365 Copilot Vulnerable to Zero-Click EchoLeak Exploit, Cybersecurity Researchers Say
  9. Samsung Rolls Out One UI 8 Beta 2 Update for Galaxy S25 Series in Select Countries
  10. Amazon Prime Video Now Shows Twice As Much Ads As Before: Report
Gadgets 360 is available in
Download Our Apps
Available in Hindi
© Copyright Red Pixels Ventures Limited 2025. All rights reserved.