Descriere YEO:
The Car That Knew Too - Disponibil la elefant.ro
Pe YEO găsești The Car That Knew Too de la MIT Press, în categoria Foreign Books.
Indiferent de nevoile tale, The Car That Knew Too Much: Can a Machine Be Moral?, Hardcover/Jean-Francois Bonnefon din categoria Foreign Books îți poate aduce un echilibru perfect între calitate și preț, cu avantaje practice și moderne.
Preț: 129.99 Lei
Caracteristicile produsului The Car That Knew Too
- Brand: MIT Press
- Categoria: Foreign Books
- Magazin: elefant.ro
- Ultima actualizare: 10-12-2024 01:49:42
Comandă The Car That Knew Too Online, Simplu și Rapid
Prin intermediul platformei YEO, poți comanda The Car That Knew Too de la elefant.ro rapid și în siguranță. Bucură-te de o experiență de cumpărături online optimizată și descoperă cele mai bune oferte actualizate constant.
Descriere magazin:
The inside story of the groundbreaking experiment that captured what people think about the life-and-death dilemmas posed by driverless cars. Human drivers don\'t find themselves facing such moral dilemmas as should I sacrifice myself by driving off a cliff if that could save the life of a little girl on the road? Human brains aren\'t fast enough to make that kind of calculation; the car is over the cliff in a nanosecond. A self-driving car, on the other hand, can compute fast enough to make such a decision--to do whatever humans have programmed it to do. But what should that be? This book investigates how people want driverless cars to decide matters of life and death. In The Car
That Knew Too
Much , psychologist
Jean-François
Bonnefon reports on a groundbreaking experiment that captured what people think cars should do in situations where not everyone can be saved. Sacrifice the passengers for pedestrians? Save children rather than adults? Kill one person so many can live?
Bonnefon and his collaborators Iyad Rahwan and Azim Shariff designed the largest experiment in moral psychology ever: the
Moral Machine, an interactive website that has allowed people --eventually, millions of them, from 233 countries and territories--to make choices within detailed accident scenarios.
Bonnefon discusses the responses (reporting, among other things, that babies, children, and pregnant women were most likely to be saved), the media frenzy over news of the experiment, and scholarly responses to it. Boosters for driverless cars argue that they will be in fewer accidents than human-driven cars. It\'s up to humans to decide how many fatal accidents we will allow these cars to have. About author(s):
Jean-François Bonnefon is Research Director at the French Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique and President of a European Commission expert group that advises on the ethics of driverless mobility.