Emulazione completa del cervello
L’emulazione completa del cervello (talvolta chiamata caricamento della mente o semplicemente caricamento) è la creazione di un modello particolareggiato della struttura computazionale del cervello umano.
80,000 Hours considera l’emulazione completa del cervello una “potenziale area di massima priorità”: una questione che, se esaminata più a fondo, potrebbe classificarsi come una delle principali sfide globali.1
David J. Chalmers (2014) Uploading: A philosophical analysis, in Russell Blackford & Damien Broderick (a c. di), Intelligence Unbound: The Future of Uploaded and Machine Minds, Chichester: John Wiley & Sons, pp. 102–118.
Daniel Eth, Juan-Carlos Foust & Brandon Whale (2013) The prospects of whole brain emulation within the next half-century, Journal of Artificial General Intelligence, vol. 4, pp. 130–152.
Robin Hanson (2016) The Age of Em: Work, Love, and Life When Robots Rule the Earth, Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Anders Sandberg (2013) Feasibility of whole brain emulation, in Vincent C. Müller (a c. di), Philosophy and Theory of Artificial Intelligence, Berlin: Springer, pp. 251–264.
Anders Sandberg (2014) Ethics of brain emulations, Journal of Experimental and Theoretical Artificial Intelligence, vol. 26, pp. 439–457.
Anders Sandberg & Nick Bostrom (2008) Whole brain emulation: A roadmap, technical report no. 2008‐3, Future of Humanity Institute, Oxford University.
Carl Shulman (2012) Could we use untrustworthy human brain emulations to make trustworthy ones?, The Fifth Conference on Artificial General Intelligence, 11 di dicembre.