The ability to locate a comfortable place to relax in an artificial intelligence has finally been developed. The artificial intelligence, which was created by a group of researchers at Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania's Carnegie Mellon University, can select a location to lay down on its own without assistance from its human overseers.
For those of us who have struggled to locate cozy locations to sleep while traveling, the AI's capacity for relaxation will come as a relief. But this new achievement has nothing to do with morals or ethics; it is just concerned with the pursuit of power over both people and things.
Researchers at Carnegie Mellon University utilize machine-learning algorithms and other technologies to enable computers to learn from examples on the web in order to emulate human learning processes. These algorithms have been trained on tens of thousands of photos that include annotations describing what's in them, such as a person lying down (for example).
The system was able to recognize where people lay down and how they control their own energy levels when they sleep, such as by sitting up or lying down, after being trained with these photographs. This made it possible for it to distinguish between resting zones and other objects in scenes.