Difference between revisions of "Vladimir Volokhov"
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
+ | {{Characterbox | ||
+ | |image= | ||
+ | |gender= m | ||
+ | |age= N/A (deceased) | ||
+ | |occupation= Computer Scientist<br /> | ||
+ | |special= Father of Friendly AI | ||
+ | }} | ||
'''Vladimir Volokhov''' was an AI researcher in the mid-22nd century. In the wake of the [[Pretoria Scandal]], and with the help of his artificial research assistant [[Laplace]] and a young girl's wish, he discovered how to mathematically represent and prove the ''intentions'' of a machine intelligence. His work netted him a Turing Award in 2146, and paved the way for the ubiquity of AI in modern human civilization. | '''Vladimir Volokhov''' was an AI researcher in the mid-22nd century. In the wake of the [[Pretoria Scandal]], and with the help of his artificial research assistant [[Laplace]] and a young girl's wish, he discovered how to mathematically represent and prove the ''intentions'' of a machine intelligence. His work netted him a Turing Award in 2146, and paved the way for the ubiquity of AI in modern human civilization. | ||
Revision as of 20:56, 16 April 2013
Vladimir Volokhov | |
---|---|
Name | Vladimir Volokhov (♂) |
Age | N/A (deceased) |
Occupation | Computer Scientist |
Special Comments |
Father of Friendly AI |
Vladimir Volokhov was an AI researcher in the mid-22nd century. In the wake of the Pretoria Scandal, and with the help of his artificial research assistant Laplace and a young girl's wish, he discovered how to mathematically represent and prove the intentions of a machine intelligence. His work netted him a Turing Award in 2146, and paved the way for the ubiquity of AI in modern human civilization.
Other works bearing his name include:
- The Volokhov Criterion - the requirement that all human Governance Representatives be capable of functioning without their networked enhancements.
- Volokhov Analysis - a means of proving whether a particular machine intelligence is sentient.