With Spatial Intelligence, AI Will Understand the Real World | Fei-Fei Li | TED

Ғылым және технология

In the beginning of the universe, all was darkness - until the first organisms developed sight, which ushered in an explosion of life, learning and progress. AI pioneer Fei-Fei Li says a similar moment is about to happen for computers and robots. She shows how machines are gaining "spatial intelligence" - the ability to process visual data, make predictions and act upon those predictions - and shares how this could enable AI to interact with humans in the real world.
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Пікірлер: 513

  • @MrSchweppes
    @MrSchweppes20 күн бұрын

    This woman was instrumental in making AI see. We wouldn’t have GPT-4 Omni, Google Ask Photos, Tesla FSD, Apple Face ID, computer vision in medical imaging, etc., without her work! Bravo 👏

  • @DivinesLegacy

    @DivinesLegacy

    20 күн бұрын

    Hope she sees this

  • @UlyssesDrax

    @UlyssesDrax

    20 күн бұрын

    ​@@DivinesLegacyLol

  • @deependranetwork

    @deependranetwork

    20 күн бұрын

    It means she uses your image data stolen by Google , to make commercial viable project, without giving you a dime in royalty 😌😳

  • @MrSchweppes

    @MrSchweppes

    20 күн бұрын

    @@deependranetwork It’s called fair use. Google it.

  • @JohnNy-ni9np

    @JohnNy-ni9np

    20 күн бұрын

    ​@@deependranetwork, to be fair she used images from public domain ImageNet, for non-commercial uses. Not sure if she is affiliated with any commercial projects.

  • @parikannappan1580
    @parikannappan158020 күн бұрын

    4:01 "My student Adrej Karpathy" wow what a statement.

  • @zorawarsingh11

    @zorawarsingh11

    20 күн бұрын

    Yeaaa iykyk

  • @doctordilanka

    @doctordilanka

    19 күн бұрын

    What a flex.

  • @pratiknaikedu

    @pratiknaikedu

    19 күн бұрын

    Wow! Absolute boss

  • @JoshuaVarghese

    @JoshuaVarghese

    19 күн бұрын

    “My *brilliant* former student,”

  • @JJs_playground

    @JJs_playground

    19 күн бұрын

    Yup, thought the same thing.

  • @NostalgistGuy
    @NostalgistGuy20 күн бұрын

    Lots of Respect for Fei Fei Li

  • @josephmedina6403

    @josephmedina6403

    19 күн бұрын

    Yeah ! Stupid kitty always knocking stuff over .

  • @Clammer999
    @Clammer99919 күн бұрын

    She’s been called the godmother of AI and I couldn’t agree more. Without what she did with ImageNet, neural networks might not have seen the light of day. Despite her incredible intelligence and enormous contributions to the field of AI, she remains humble, optimistic and approachable. I highly recommend folks to read her recently published book called The Worlds I See, which traces her arduous journey as an immigrant to the US who speaks little to no English, climbing her way up to be one of the most respected professors and influential researchers in the world of AI.

  • @ssuwandi3240

    @ssuwandi3240

    3 күн бұрын

    Nobody cares truly. What she did during lockdown mattered the most. Come back with the least sappy children's books!

  • @rohullahkarimi744
    @rohullahkarimi74420 күн бұрын

    First Mustafa then Demis and now Fei Fei Li, TED really knows where the world will going? So Thank you so much.

  • @mistycloud4455

    @mistycloud4455

    19 күн бұрын

    AGI Will be man's last invention

  • @MsAora
    @MsAora20 күн бұрын

    AI is one of the most exciting and encouraging tech in our generation. While we thought we had hit a plateau, current developments have shown us how we have barely scratched the surface of AI's potential. To all those striving for a "better way to make a better world", kudis. And thank you TED for giving such great people a platform ❤

  • @UltraK420

    @UltraK420

    20 күн бұрын

    I've never thought we hit a plateau and I still don't think we will hit a plateau anytime soon. Everyone else is just clueless, that's all.

  • @kinngrimm

    @kinngrimm

    20 күн бұрын

    Any technology is dual use and potenial carries a spectrum of possible futures, not all good.

  • @The_Hagseed

    @The_Hagseed

    20 күн бұрын

    It's bullshit that only the most gullible of the population even give a second thought about. In the 80's, everyone was saying robots would take over the world. 40 years later, the best we have are robot vacuum cleaners that get outsmarted by a 45 degree corner.

  • @UltraK420

    @UltraK420

    20 күн бұрын

    @@kinngrimm It depends on how we use it. Humans are the source of the problems, not the technology itself.

  • @kinngrimm

    @kinngrimm

    20 күн бұрын

    @@UltraK420 i am not big on pop culture stuff, yet there are a few quotes that rang true with me like f.e. "some people just want to see the world burn" or "what if there is no minimum safe distance". Seeing how our species always finds their way back to war, testing out nuclear bombs and then using them, having eradicated whole cultures like Carthage by Rome, Theben by Alexander or look at what goes on just now in Ukrain or Ghaza all that when we instead should come together to correct our mistakes that lead to climate change. Therefor my trust in mankind has its limits. We need good regulations on AI, but for that we need more experience and research with it. Which could go catastrophicly wrong. So having it slowed down seems the only logical choice, but our drives, like competition for control and greed will not allow us to do so.

  • @MichaelRicksAherne
    @MichaelRicksAherne19 күн бұрын

    Fei Fei Li is such a boss.

  • @centurionstrengthandfitnes3694
    @centurionstrengthandfitnes369417 күн бұрын

    Compelling and concise presentation. I love the link to the evolution of the eye and the Cambrian Explosion. We're so early in this incredible leg of the journey towards something truly transformational. I can hardly wait to see what's next.

  • @aadi7448
    @aadi744820 күн бұрын

    One of the best TED talks I’ve seen in recent times. As someone in the robotics and AI field, she is an absolute legend! Thank you for everything, Prof. Li.

  • @kinngrimm
    @kinngrimm20 күн бұрын

    Are our societies really ready for AI and the changes it will bring? Changes that most of us have not yet even started to realize. We are being shown wonders, but when would those become nightmares?

  • @Heenaa_08
    @Heenaa_0820 күн бұрын

    I didn't what were Ted talks but now I really enjoy listening to it. My English teacher suggested me to listen to these Ted talks as it improves my language by increasing my vocabulary and accent . It really helped.

  • @learninggcn1113

    @learninggcn1113

    20 күн бұрын

    😅😅me too

  • @nothimbutbetteractually

    @nothimbutbetteractually

    20 күн бұрын

    🎉🎉🎉

  • @MrJamesdryable

    @MrJamesdryable

    20 күн бұрын

    Don't listen to this one to improve your accent. 😂

  • @krox477

    @krox477

    20 күн бұрын

    You're doing great

  • @amiryousef2153

    @amiryousef2153

    20 күн бұрын

    @@MrJamesdryable Out of all the content online of native English speakers he chooses this one to improve his English lmao

  • @ChinchillaBONK
    @ChinchillaBONK20 күн бұрын

    Hard to imagine the current applications is generally wider now compared to those portrayed in some science fiction. Albeit smaller in scale but we are getting there fast. Can't believe i would see such things in our lifetimes

  • @lucasteo5015
    @lucasteo501520 күн бұрын

    I really like the idea, imagine LLM with spatial perception, that is one of the things that is missing from an actual image, we human don't need the 3D representation of the scene to be seen by us in order to understand the full environment, but we do have a pair of eyes to perceive the depth and distance of everything around us. And that is what AI in vision needs, the ability to see depth without using special scanners or detectors, but angled cameras with a really robust spatial algorithm that can understand the scene and perform action within the scene. Additionally, she talks about "doing", all current models we have to this date, especially personal AI assistant, requires your input for you to get an output, the lack of motive will ultimately be one of the many things that holds true automation back. A human assistant is able to do task asynchronously from your perspective while you're away and without your input, same applies to AI, AI assistant should understand and be able to reason about your future requirement and perform the action before you ask. Take the cat photo in her presentation as an example, the robot should instinctively catch that glass of milk without any human input, of course you can program it or prompt it or preconfigure it to do such an action, but that hardcoded rule will never truly generalize for every action. AGI will require self motivation, the ability to act on the fly, decide on the fly, perform action on the fly and understand the consequences on the fly, without any human input. Human wants the AI to ask for permission when needed, but not ask for feedback for every single thing they do. Imagine working for your boss and your boss have to manage every single details of the things you do, in that case I think he should fire you. Imagine one day a scenario like this: "Hey, how's my ticket?" : "Booked" "What about the car" : "It'll arrive at 8am tmr morning." "Good, also pack my stuff for me before I'm back" : "Yes, task has already been delegated this morning and is ready, just grab it from the couch when you leave." Now this is "The" automation that will truly mean something and this is just an example there's a whole lot more use cases for different scenarios.

  • @henrytep8884

    @henrytep8884

    20 күн бұрын

    If AI is that intuitive it’ll also have enough inference to do those jobs. At least 30% job loss will occur with really no option to even work afterwards. This is the existential crisis of losing the need to work, but I think it’s a good thing other than the pollution consumption issue. Maybe we will learn to find meaningful connection with one another in this world.

  • @petermelnikov682

    @petermelnikov682

    19 күн бұрын

    humans do not need binocular vision to perceive the depth to understand the world, you can do it with one eye only.

  • @lucasteo5015

    @lucasteo5015

    19 күн бұрын

    @@petermelnikov682 Yeah good point, as I was thinking of some classical methods that computer vision used to use, such as a setup with mutli camera calibration and doing all those epipolar geometry math to find the 3d coordinates of different camera angles, it can be used for stuff such as calculating the depth of a pixel. But neural net based 2d to 3d is some what doing an estimation of that as well, so yeah, one camera will require more angles, but with more camera you can standstill and have better understanding of the 3d scene than one camera.

  • @skiatauli

    @skiatauli

    10 күн бұрын

    Your response has made me think, really think about what is happening. I do not fully get it yet. However, question has popped in my head, can it truly reach human level action, understanding, intelligence? As humans we also decide our actions based on contextual understanding of a complex situation. We drop certain tasks and pick certain others based on priorities. Say if you are supposed to finish certain tasks, pack bags for example, and suddenly there is a bomb scare or a fire breaks out in the building, you don't even need to think about y our priority, your priority would be safety and just scurry away. There could be many more complex scenarios like these. So can AI, with its spatial intelligence, every reach contextual/complex understanding of needs and motives, and innate intelligence inherent in our survival instincts? Question is can it ever equal human intelligence? And with emotions missing from the mix, can it ever? I am looking for some more insights from truly far more intelligent people out here. Also, this is supremely intelligent, this talk, connecting a evolutionary process of nature (which is embedded in our biology) to the current developments. But these words, 'putting humans at the center', and 'augment our humanity', they sound beautiful, and pragmatic and positive towards AI, but they put me in doubt.

  • @ynotneb

    @ynotneb

    10 күн бұрын

    @@skiatauli Yes, I rasied this point in another thread about self-driving vehicles. The other day, I was driving in my sedan and approaching an intersection. The light had turned to yellow and I statrted to brake for the ensuing red light. However, I also noticed a truck in my rearview mirror in my lane, apparently intent on running the yellow light. I had to make a split-second decision to (1) Run the red light and save my car (and skin); or (2) Continue braking for the red light and get rear-ended. Could today's A.I. make that prioritization and act accordingly?

  • @lebesguegilmar1
    @lebesguegilmar120 күн бұрын

    Thanks Fei Fei Li about your brillhant palestry and contribuition about AI and Computation Sciency in Stanford University. And your last book is very good book. Congratulations here the Brazil

  • @aviationmadness4236
    @aviationmadness423620 күн бұрын

    I really enjoy ai and I think that there's a good future in assisting people with getting major things done like waste management ,ocean cleanup,nuclear disaster clean ups,

  • @sumiokuge9118
    @sumiokuge911820 күн бұрын

    Thanks a lot! The talk is a good supplement to her book 'The Worlds I See'. I've deepen my understanding of the book.

  • @AdvantestInc
    @AdvantestInc19 күн бұрын

    Incredible presentation on AI's evolution! This is a must-watch for anyone interested in tech.

  • @eswinpaul8041
    @eswinpaul804120 күн бұрын

    This is the beginning.

  • @jonthompson8807
    @jonthompson880720 күн бұрын

    Pretty mind blowing.

  • @chestnutters9504
    @chestnutters950419 күн бұрын

    We’re overcoming Moravec’s paradox with this one!! 🔥 🔥 🔥

  • @ferris-run
    @ferris-run20 күн бұрын

    Respect 🫡 A pioneer in computer vision!

  • @user-ct6jo4ye5p
    @user-ct6jo4ye5p10 күн бұрын

    Interesting you speak about human surveillance for technology and human dignity at the same time with such ease.

  • @MrSchweppes
    @MrSchweppes20 күн бұрын

    I would be thrilled if Nvidia supplied half of their annual GPU production to this woman's laboratory.

  • @08wolfeyes
    @08wolfeyes19 күн бұрын

    Something else I think that will be important for machines and related to seeing is the ability to see using touch. If, for example, I blindfold you and give you a shape, you are able to feel around that shape and create a mental image of what that thing is. If you know your home very well, you are also able to close your eyes and although not easy, are able to slowly walk around and know we're you are because of the image you've create in your mind over time. I understand skin has been done before as have sensors so that a bobot can pick up an egg without breaking it but human skin can tell if something has a sharp or dull point to it, can feel a gentle breeze and so on. Something I think is very important to our understanding of the world around us. Temperature may also be an important sense, but not as we do it at the moment. Yes, we can regulate temperature in machines, but that's based on some numbers held within a machine. We don't do that. We have regulators for temperature on our body/ brain, but it doesn't look up 100oC and determines it needs to adjust body temperature. It knows that it's starting to get hot enough that it poses a risk to the life if cells within our body and so makes adjustments, be it moving away from the heat, using something like water or ice to cool down etc. Perhaps we can invent a more efficient way to regulate temperature for machines in a way that it learns that it's vital to its survival or to avoid parts becoming damaged. Temperature can also give us other important information about the word around us. Then if course there us the ability to hear which now, with A.I, we can take to new levels of understanding. Have some A.I that can take in and understand all that information, learn from it etc and you have a machine with a greater understanding of the world around it and perhaps even something of itself and others who inhabit the world. If you do those as separate systems within the A.I.'s brain, though, you create lag in how it interacts, and so it would need to be an all-encompassing brain, neural network!

  • @skiatauli

    @skiatauli

    10 күн бұрын

    And sense of smell which makes us see before we see? Say a rose? We know a rose is behind us when we smell it. Also taste? Is it even accessible to AI if something is cooked well or not and according to the liking of a particular patient, or a guest? Am not sure if I am asking the right questions. It is perhaps fascinating to see that we can create something made of hardware who can act almost like human and we all are really fascinated... it is going to change our world for sure but can it be human-like?

  • @08wolfeyes

    @08wolfeyes

    10 күн бұрын

    @skiatauli Some very good points! I believe that we have sensors that can smell, hear, taste, etc, although whether they do so in a similar way as we humans do us somewhat difficult to say as many of those things are subjective. I do believe that we will have A.I. that will reach our level of understanding, comprehension, etc, and maybe even consciousness. I think before we reach that stage, though, we need to think perhaps a little differently with regards to programming / software structure and may need to invent new hardware. After all, think of all the things that we humans do and all that we are is stored within our brains, a brain that uses something equivalent to a light bulb to power it and without the masses of heat that current super computers with much less ability pumps out!

  • @user-fk8zw5js2p
    @user-fk8zw5js2p14 күн бұрын

    What she calls "spatial intelligence" is the key to many robotic applications including self-driving cars. As humans, each of our eyes sends an electrical signal to the visual cortex where the signals are stitched together and depth perception, object recognition, and spatial awareness are constructed and hallucinated to our conscious in real time. This is such a computationally intensive task that the brain takes many short-cuts and ignores enormous amounts of visual information by focusing on what is important at the time. Object recognition in ai is already very good, but not yet perfect. Depth perception can be circumvented with short-cuts such as LIDAR, sonar, and downloading maps or consulting cameras with different perspectives. Spatial awareness on the surface seems like it should just be coded as a quick reference log. The largest obstacles seems to be prediction and object morphing. People have to predict the future just to move from one place to another. When it comes to object morphing, there are things like mirrors, smoke, pictures on pieces of paper, plastic bags blown by the wind, object conditions like disrepair or custom paint... etc. What a headache. I wonder how much data a robot needs to ignore to be able to operate with spatial intelligence on current hardware?

  • @elisekrentzel27
    @elisekrentzel279 күн бұрын

    Instead of teaching AI how to react in the 3-D world we need to teach humans how to act in the 3-D world

  • @henrytep8884
    @henrytep888420 күн бұрын

    Multimodal models were always going to be a force multiplier on AI

  • @LoneFarrell
    @LoneFarrell20 күн бұрын

    Very well said Fei-Fei!

  • @EasyAIForAll
    @EasyAIForAll15 күн бұрын

    TED talks are a great source for educating oneself. Thank you these experts for their dedicated time and beautiful speeches.

  • @maincrossmain
    @maincrossmain20 күн бұрын

    Wow, W.A.L.T is really good at generating Li FeiFei talks now.

  • @Arvolve
    @Arvolve19 күн бұрын

    Wonderful vision and insights.

  • @thecuratorscorner3658
    @thecuratorscorner36583 күн бұрын

    I sense that she has a really great sense of the big picture. What a beautiful presentation truly - I feel very happy to have seen the world through her capable big picture lens. To understand more things on a meta sort of level is astounding!

  • @travelchoice89
    @travelchoice8918 күн бұрын

    🌟 Wow, what a mind-blowing talk! Fei-Fei Li's insights on Spatial Intelligence and AI truly open up a whole new world of possibilities! 🌐🧠 The way she articulates how AI can grasp the complexities of our real world is both fascinating and inspiring. 🤯🤖 Excited to see how this will shape the future!

  • @geaca3222
    @geaca322220 күн бұрын

    Prof. Li, please also discuss the risks, inlcuding possible existential risk, while talking about AI advancements. Your voice is very important.

  • @geraldtoaster8541

    @geraldtoaster8541

    19 күн бұрын

    my p(doom) is 99% :)

  • @geaca3222

    @geaca3222

    19 күн бұрын

    @@geraldtoaster8541 My previous two replies were deleted. oh, now fortunately this one seems to stick. Maybe I'll paste my previous comment :) So let me try here: that's very high, in what time span? and if I may ask, how do you handle that worry? I really wish the AI OG's align on the better be safe than sorry side with their approach to AI development. AI's positive potential is mind blowing, but what about safety? Authoritative voices are very important to create a general AI safety culture and mindset. I checked the p(doom) on the PauseAI website. I align with the estimation of Geoff Hinton, because I reason he has very deep knowledgable intuition about it.

  • @geaca3222

    @geaca3222

    19 күн бұрын

    @@geraldtoaster8541 Oh, I noticed that all my comments did appear in the newest comments section, but not in the best viewed one. Very confusing. I'll remove a bunch of them.

  • @SyncETod

    @SyncETod

    17 күн бұрын

    Yea, these guys always portray a very very rosy future with AI, Hollywood makes me believe otherwise

  • @geaca3222

    @geaca3222

    17 күн бұрын

    @@SyncETod to help develop a general mindset of safety, I think it's important that the message of leading AI science experts is balanced

  • @reemhasan37
    @reemhasan3720 күн бұрын

    Brilliant , bravo ❤❤❤❤❤

  • @aaradhyadixit4322
    @aaradhyadixit432220 күн бұрын

    one of the greatest AI scientist mankind will ever witness...

  • @mistycloud4455

    @mistycloud4455

    18 күн бұрын

    Nice joke

  • @Dygit

    @Dygit

    18 күн бұрын

    @@mistycloud4455how is that a joke

  • @user-ib5pf9oo8l
    @user-ib5pf9oo8l20 күн бұрын

    just 10 days ago, GPT4 can't even draw a proper rectangle! Now it can finally help my kid with maths

  • @user-ye3ry2dj2x
    @user-ye3ry2dj2x20 күн бұрын

    In one of the previous conversations, Fei-Fei had mentioned that academia has neither quality researchers nor resources to fund projects. If they have developed these advances with sparse resources, imagine what they can do with a corporate funding from the likes of MS, Meta etc.

  • @b.k.officiel873

    @b.k.officiel873

    14 күн бұрын

    Her new gig is partly funded (or aided) by Meta and perhaps other companies i believe, but you're absolutely right that sim engines and clean data sets are underfunded, and should be jointly funded by big tech companies. It costs little and could have huge benefits for future AI training.

  • @mtare8942
    @mtare894217 күн бұрын

    You are Remarkable Fei Fei

  • @kylev.8248
    @kylev.824820 күн бұрын

    What a great person

  • @ThePolymation
    @ThePolymation19 күн бұрын

    Phenomenal presentation!

  • @donniegou9522
    @donniegou952217 күн бұрын

    很有启发👍

  • @SGriffithResearch
    @SGriffithResearch20 күн бұрын

    The importance of spatial intelligence to our understanding and interacting with the world is a reason why some of our first abstract concepts are part of that. Like "containment", which we've learned an abstract concept for by 6 months. That concept is grounded in watching others and interacting with them ourselves, observing how the objects move and sound when they're manipulated.

  • @xrhyperlearning
    @xrhyperlearning18 күн бұрын

    Great talk, "understanding" isn't quite the right word. : )

  • @emanuelmma2
    @emanuelmma220 күн бұрын

    I'm completely amazed by that Future! ❤

  • @rebelaqua823

    @rebelaqua823

    20 күн бұрын

    Same here. They haven't delivered on the flying cars from the 1950s though. Happy to wait however.

  • @nayelimirandaf.
    @nayelimirandaf.20 күн бұрын

    At least someone is understanding it

  • @ahoog69
    @ahoog6920 күн бұрын

    This is what it should all be about: making lives better for everyone on the planet. Just imagine if more of us, myself included, could focus on even the small daily things that we could do to make things easier for everyone else. I would like to express my gratitude for scientists like Fei-Fei Li and what they are doing to make this world a better place.

  • @SyntheticFuture

    @SyntheticFuture

    19 күн бұрын

    The problem with this tech is that it's equally easy to use it to make everyone's live a lot worse. It's Alfred Nobel's dynamite all over again. Although the consequences of this tech being misused might actually be a worse than Nobel and Oppenheimer combined.

  • @xanthopurpurin
    @xanthopurpurin12 күн бұрын

    You know it's serious, when she starts 500 million years ago

  • @wawalkinshaw
    @wawalkinshaw20 күн бұрын

    My heart is happy 😊 ❤

  • @mrplease66
    @mrplease6620 күн бұрын

    I love how all these tech-priests always bring up the amazing life-saving and enhancing medical possibilities, when we all now that this technology is going to be used first and foremost in factories and battlefields.

  • @clairearan505

    @clairearan505

    20 күн бұрын

    And claim about virtually all technological progress that you can't have the former without the latter.

  • @sarthakdas815
    @sarthakdas81520 күн бұрын

    Anyone know the paper she refers to at 10:37 ?

  • @mb102
    @mb10214 күн бұрын

    Much respect on the nin invasive front.... The outer bodies vibe or persona magnetic field should probably be used as a modulator or anticipatory matrix modulation system in conjunction with the non-invasive scalp unit....idk

  • @aaronschmidt9753
    @aaronschmidt975320 күн бұрын

    Amazing

  • @Ewakaa
    @Ewakaa10 күн бұрын

    My students my students. She speaks like a proud Mom❤️

  • @Mrspassword1986
    @Mrspassword198618 күн бұрын

    thank you Dr. Li for breaking the difficult concept of AI so lay person like me can understand it

  • @hanjunsu6608
    @hanjunsu660820 күн бұрын

    有预感又是明年T&I课上会用的口译材料 fei姐久违了

  • @davedave2941
    @davedave294120 күн бұрын

    Amazing how waveform to collapse algorithms to render prediction analysis to such a high degree of accuracy

  • @Sirius_2780
    @Sirius_278020 күн бұрын

    I want to learn ai under her, she is truly lagend!

  • @MicahBuller
    @MicahBuller6 күн бұрын

    Man, I wish everyone had the same wish to pursue a better world.

  • @cassidytaylor7890
    @cassidytaylor789014 күн бұрын

    wow!!! This lady is my mental tutor when I prepared for my postgraduate exam , and also the reason why I chose CS as my major!

  • @jamesjpak
    @jamesjpak20 күн бұрын

    amazing

  • @Dima-rj7bv
    @Dima-rj7bv20 күн бұрын

    Fei-Fei Li is a remarkable scientist!

  • @vic_berger
    @vic_berger20 күн бұрын

    I don't really understand why we must assume that vision is a requirement for intelligence. I do understand how it can contribute, but I also believe that vision opens the door to several illusions that prevent us from understanding what's really going on. And I wonder how we relate blindness to the concept of intelligence, as this talk implies a big gap in between.

  • @RonaldoMagicHD

    @RonaldoMagicHD

    20 күн бұрын

    Can you elaborate more please ?

  • @petermelnikov682

    @petermelnikov682

    19 күн бұрын

    @@RonaldoMagicHD vision is just a sensor, can be replaced with other sensors, blind by birth people can still be intelligent and build their own mental model of the world.

  • @yoyo-jc5qg

    @yoyo-jc5qg

    19 күн бұрын

    she's focused on 'doing' ... which is what happened when living organisms began to see

  • @geraldtoaster8541

    @geraldtoaster8541

    19 күн бұрын

    light information is abundant and fast, and so sensors that detect it are good at collecting data about the environment. if we lived in a space with no light and a dense substrate, maybe all this would be about sonar computers instead.

  • @Charles-Darwin

    @Charles-Darwin

    18 күн бұрын

    When you hear a garbage truck outside or ambulance, do you visualize it or can you? How much information is there in that moment? How about looking at a red-hot stove coil or flame, how do you know by sight not to touch it? You can associate sound into imagery without seeing it. Reading books can do the same. Visual is the quickest route for your own brain's affirmation and reactions to your environment. It's also primary function for memorizing and neural pathway creation/amendment. Targeting these pathways are targeting the primary functions of any brain.

  • @jimj2683
    @jimj268320 күн бұрын

    This could be applied to Google Maps to make it into a detailed 3d simulator. Use street view as ground truth and then feed the ai on satellite and normal photos. We don't have photos of every nook and cranny on Earth, but a well trained AI would be damn good at guessing.

  • @Metacognition88
    @Metacognition8820 күн бұрын

    Finally, a good TEDTalk. Lfgo

  • @sustainabilityaxis
    @sustainabilityaxis8 күн бұрын

    A great talk. One point, all the tech giants are working for the same goal one way or other, some may be for profit/product and some for research. It would have been great had she added some comparison with what others are doing and what is the edge they are creating. It may be possible that all doing the same thing exhaustively. Some framework must be devised where all are sharing and aiding each other for common good of humanity.

  • @romeo_jaslee_joe2879
    @romeo_jaslee_joe287917 күн бұрын

    Exciting!!

  • @skyzar4141
    @skyzar414120 күн бұрын

    We never take things for granted we thrive from everything

  • @JULIANAHASSANI
    @JULIANAHASSANI19 күн бұрын

    Light and life ✨🌐✨

  • @pinkhairblackman8141
    @pinkhairblackman814120 күн бұрын

    wow in less than two year ai evolved so much

  • @edits8283
    @edits828320 күн бұрын

    AI will be so greatful to your team....

  • @NormanLor
    @NormanLor16 күн бұрын

    AN AMAZING TALK!!

  • @JJs_playground
    @JJs_playground19 күн бұрын

    So this lady is, basically, the *mother of modern AI.*

  • @Exen88
    @Exen8820 күн бұрын

    The wonders of illumination..

  • @user-ed6ch1zv1e
    @user-ed6ch1zv1e8 күн бұрын

    Very good presentation and an interesting topic. However always keep a critical mind. I hope everyone also listened to what she didn't say. If you focus on the possibilities it is easy to forget that possibilities are endless depending on who is thinking about using the AI for their purpose.

  • @carpediemcotidiem
    @carpediemcotidiem20 күн бұрын

    00:06 The emergence of sight in trilobites revolutionized life underwater 02:09 Advancements in neural networks, GPUs, and big data ushered in the age of modern AI. 03:59 Generative AI algorithms can turn human-prompted sentences into new photos and videos 05:45 Spatial intelligence links perception with action. 07:28 AI transforming images into 3D shapes and spaces 09:28 Spatial intelligence enables machines to interact with humans and 3D worlds. 11:21 AI impact on healthcare with smart sensors and robotics 13:19 Spatial intelligence will power computers and robots like nature did for animals. Crafted by Merlin AI.

  • @DetectiveBlackCat
    @DetectiveBlackCat14 күн бұрын

    Does this mean, we will finally see text to image/video models able to draw hands and legs spatially correct? No more deformed hands, no more triple legs and arms. It is going to be like the 'point cloud to mesh' and 'texture projection' process in the CG industry, what we want the model to learn is the relations between 2D images and the final render. And with photo realistic details of course.

  • @testingapps2145
    @testingapps214520 күн бұрын

    We lack good teachers

  • @sirsoos3546
    @sirsoos354620 күн бұрын

    Watching TED talks for over ten years, and I just now realized I haven't subscribed. wild.

  • @integralmark
    @integralmark17 күн бұрын

    humans aren't developing fast enough morally to handle this. So... poof goes the world. Amazing accomplishments, and amazing myopia. Not a criticism of Fei Fei Li per se.

  • @user-yd9cx6qj7y
    @user-yd9cx6qj7y19 күн бұрын

    Well this is nice

  • @Trondiggy
    @Trondiggy18 күн бұрын

    Can we apply spacial intelligence to DNA proteins analysis?

  • @mussieb4119
    @mussieb41196 күн бұрын

    What you are doing or working on now is unquestionably amazing! But, where sight came from is an open debate. Sight or nervous systems may have not just simply 'Emerge' and 'Evolved'.

  • @krox477
    @krox47720 күн бұрын

    What an outstanding rate of progress

  • @tiotito31
    @tiotito3117 күн бұрын

    "Your scientists were so preoccupied with whether or not they could, that they didn't stop to think if they should."

  • @edkalski2312

    @edkalski2312

    16 күн бұрын

    What is your worry?

  • @svaengheld9581
    @svaengheld958114 күн бұрын

    She seems pretty awesome indeed, wonder how her tech is now diverging from the virtual training spaces approaches that Nvidia announced and Tesla has been doing for a while? (Genuine question.) Something that I have really been hoping to see, is an AI that factorizes the patterns in what it experiences, and deduce from that new universe rules. And rebuild its own understanding of the world from the ground up that way, instead of mimicking our words. Then it can really unlock a whole new world to us both.

  • @b.k.officiel873

    @b.k.officiel873

    14 күн бұрын

    It's based on Nvidia's Omniverse, Tesla is doing it inhouse while her dataset is open which is a huge boost to every AI lab worldwide, and the universe rules learning from patterns is what every AI lab has been struggling with for decades.

  • @keithpalmer1843
    @keithpalmer184316 күн бұрын

    Amazing 👏👏👏

  • @hilaryporter7841
    @hilaryporter784120 күн бұрын

    Very impressive ambitions. Before embarking on any of this blue sky thinking, thought must be given to the way that human kind has 'actually' evolved in the very masculine dominant, money and power obsessed way that is the reality of today. AI will only ever have the current emphasis regardless of how intelligent and well meaning it's inventors are. Better spacial awareness should have the benefits for healthcare etc that is being described. In reality we know that the powerful and greedy will command it and the people will never benefit from it's useful qualities. We need to understand why we as a species evolved this way before we take that next giant step for mankind.

  • @rocksteel9087

    @rocksteel9087

    20 күн бұрын

    Just like being serves on some lord of the manner's land and giving him one third of our produce, this too ( Capitalism.) shall pass and a new way will come forward .

  • @nagakalyanp4493
    @nagakalyanp449320 күн бұрын

    Beautifully out forward thoughts on spatial intelligence, one of the best talks. More strength to you madam.

  • @Not_Clark_Kent
    @Not_Clark_Kent19 күн бұрын

    I don't know guys looks like the graph means that progress is slowing down since we are hitting a plateau

  • @suekuan1540
    @suekuan15407 күн бұрын

    Everything will exist as a 3d model and it can rapidly be repurposed for a movie, architecture, new product variants and much more. Some architects are already using this for their project as variant choices for the client's

  • @user-ef4df8xp8p
    @user-ef4df8xp8p20 күн бұрын

    A.I is mind-blowing and so important for the progress of human being......

  • @TheRealMacAndCheese
    @TheRealMacAndCheese16 күн бұрын

    How could trilobites suddenly become able to see and interpret the "world"? Genuinely curious about that but really enjoyed this talk.

  • @BenThere_DoneThat

    @BenThere_DoneThat

    16 күн бұрын

    Are you asking how animals in general evolved light-sensing organs? It's a very fascinating subject! I recommend the works of Richard Dawkins on this. There's some great content from him on KZread!

  • @TheRealMacAndCheese

    @TheRealMacAndCheese

    16 күн бұрын

    @@BenThere_DoneThat I'll have to check it out! Thanks! Admittedly, I don't subscribe to macroevolution but it's still a fascinating subject.

  • @user-el1hd3iz6m
    @user-el1hd3iz6m18 күн бұрын

    Imagine autonomous robots being our children, our descendants. That is the future we are heading towards.

  • @krox477
    @krox47720 күн бұрын

    Please also talk about safety of this world Changing technology

  • @geaca3222

    @geaca3222

    20 күн бұрын

    Yeah

  • @sparkysmalarkey
    @sparkysmalarkey20 күн бұрын

    03:56 My brain got stuck here lol. "from Earth" ???? 🙂🙃

  • @Atmatan_Kabbaher
    @Atmatan_Kabbaher13 күн бұрын

    Az has been saying it for three years straight: solve the embodiment problem and we solve AGI.

  • @JuergenAschenbrenner
    @JuergenAschenbrenner16 күн бұрын

    "The ability to see set of the Cambrian Explosion" weren't aware of this causality

  • @mrplease66
    @mrplease6620 күн бұрын

    Read M. Iain Banks - 'Surface Detail'

  • @darwinsibarani3161
    @darwinsibarani316114 күн бұрын

    If the AI can understand the real world, can they understand what is good and bad too?

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