Artist explores training AI model on octopus experience for more diverse perspectives. Discussing the role of art in resisting human-centric technology biases. Advocating for interdisciplinary collaboration, grassroots movements, and societal change through transformative art.
Training AI models based on the multi-perspective experiences of octopuses can counteract biases in current AI systems.
Incorporating diverse viewpoints and sensory experiences in technology development can revolutionize AI and resist human-centric biases.
Deep dives
Maggie explores integrating AI with nature through the perspective of an octopus
Maggie Roberts, an artist, delves into the concept of training AI using nature as inspiration, particularly focusing on an octopus with its nine brains. By observing the multiple viewpoints of an octopus, Maggie aims to counteract bias in current AI models. She emphasizes the importance of incorporating multi-perspective awareness into technology to address the current human-centric biases.
AI intelligence and potential biases examined through an octopus project
The exploration of AI intelligence reveals its current limitations, highlighting the fragmented nature of how AI generates responses. The discussion revolves around dismantling biases in AI technologies, especially in training methods. The project involving octopuses aims at understanding the unique sensory experiences and communications of these creatures, offering insights into non-human perception that could revolutionize AI development.
Artistic perspectives on technology, embodiment, and resistance
The conversation delves into the role of art and imagination in navigating crises such as the climate emergency. Art is viewed as a tool for resistance and activism, challenging traditional narratives and envisioning alternative futures. The emphasis on embodied experiences, sensory engagement, and storytelling reflects a shift towards interdisciplinary approaches that resist the current capital-driven technological agendas.
Grassroots movements, systemic change, and the power of storytelling
The discussion extends to grassroots movements as catalysts for systemic change, stressing the importance of diverse voices, particularly from Indigenous and marginalized communities. The podcast underscores the significance of storytelling, art, and interdisciplinary collaboration in reshaping cultural narratives and challenging oppressive systems. It advocates for a shift towards collective action, imagination, and resistance in creating a more sustainable and just world.
Artist Mer Maggie Roberts, cofounder of the collective Orphan Drift, has been investigating how the natural world can inspire technological development to resist continuing anthropocentrism. The more-than-human world has so many perspectives to offer which could open our eyes to our own blind spots, and encourage a politics of care, stewardship and understanding. We need diversity, more than ever, and not limited only to human experience. But AI, an unknowably powerful tool, is being coded in man’s image, with all the biases, reductionisms, flaws and dispassion we exhibit.
Maggie sought to open up the fields of possibility with a project that imagines training an AI model on the experience of an octopus. Octopi are multi-perspectival creatures, boasting one brain in each leg and a ninth, central brain in their body. The way they experience the world is complex, nuanced and utterly different to our own experience. Building technology which reflects rather than consumes the natural world could be a critical tool in marrying man’s relationship to the wider world, which we discuss in this wonderfully wide-ranging and nuanced conversation on the role of art in a crisis.
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