The Singularity Institute’s research fellows and research associates have more peer-reviewed publications forthcoming in 2012 than they had published in all past years combined.
Dewey, Learning What to Value (peer reviewed for Proceedings of the 4th Internation Conference on Artificial General Intelligence, edited by Schmidhuber et al.)
Muehlhauser & Salamon, Intelligence Explosion: Evidence and Import (peer reviewed for The Singularity Hypothesis: A Scientific and Philosophical Assessment, edited by Eden et al.)
Muehlhauser & Helm, The Singularity and Machine Ethics (peer reviewed for The Singularity Hypothesis: A Scientific and Philosophical Assessment, edited by Eden et al.)
Bostrom & Yudkowsky, The Ethics of Artificial Intelligence (peer reviewed for The Cambridge Handbook to Artificial Intelligence, edited by Ramsey & Frankish)
Or, if we’re just talking about SI staff members’ peer-reviewed publications, then we might end up being tied with all past years combined (we’ll see).
Muehlhauser & Salamon, Intelligence Explosion: Evidence and Import (peer reviewed for The Singularity Hypothesis: A Scientific and Philosophical Assessment, edited by Eden et al.)
Muehlhauser & Helm, The Singularity and Machine Ethics (peer reviewed for The Singularity Hypothesis: A Scientific and Philosophical Assessment, edited by Eden et al.)
Bostrom & Yudkowsky, The Ethics of Artificial Intelligence (peer reviewed for The Cambridge Handbook to Artificial Intelligence, edited by Ramsey & Frankish)
Well, due to the endless delays of the academic publishing world, many of these peer-reviewed publications have been pushed into 2013. Thus, SI research fellows’ peer-reviewed 2012 publications were:
Fun fact of the day:
The Singularity Institute’s research fellows and research associates have more peer-reviewed publications forthcoming in 2012 than they had published in all past years combined.
2000-2011 peer reviewed publications (5):
Yudkowsky, Levels of Organization in General Intelligence (peer reviewed for Artificial General Intelligence, edited by Goertzel and Pennachin)
Yudkowsky, Cognitive Biases Potentially Affecting Judgment of Global Risks (peer reviewed for Global Catastrophic Risks, edited by Bostrom & Cirkovic)
Yudkowsky, Artificial Intelligence as a Positive and Negative Factor in Global Risk (peer reviewed for Global Catastrophic Risks, edited by Bostrom & Cirkovic)
Dewey, Learning What to Value (peer reviewed for Proceedings of the 4th Internation Conference on Artificial General Intelligence, edited by Schmidhuber et al.)
Yudkowsky, Complex Value Systems are Required to Realize Valuable Futures (peer reviewed for Proceedings of the 4th Internation Conference on Artificial General Intelligence, edited by Schmidhuber et al.)
2012 peer reviewed publications (8 so far):
Muehlhauser & Salamon, Intelligence Explosion: Evidence and Import (peer reviewed for The Singularity Hypothesis: A Scientific and Philosophical Assessment, edited by Eden et al.)
Muehlhauser & Helm, The Singularity and Machine Ethics (peer reviewed for The Singularity Hypothesis: A Scientific and Philosophical Assessment, edited by Eden et al.)
Yampolskiy & Fox, Artificial General Intelligence and the Human Mental Model (peer reviewed for The Singularity Hypothesis: A Scientific and Philosophical Assessment, edited by Eden et al.)
Yampolskiy & Fox, Safety Engineering for Artificial General Intelligence (peer reviewed for Topoi)
Shulman & Bostrom, How Hard is Artificial Intelligence? Evolutionary Arguments and Selection Effects (peer reviewed for Journal of Consciousness Studies)
Bostrom & Yudkowsky, The Ethics of Artificial Intelligence (peer reviewed for The Cambridge Handbook to Artificial Intelligence, edited by Ramsey & Frankish)
Sotala, Advantages of artificial intelligences, uploads and digital minds (peer reviewed for International Journal of Machine Consciousness)
Sotala, Coalescing minds: brain uploading-related group mind scenarios (peer reviewed for International Journal of Machine Consciousness)
Or, if we’re just talking about SI staff members’ peer-reviewed publications, then we might end up being tied with all past years combined (we’ll see).
2000-2011 peer reviewed publications (4):
Yudkowsky, Levels of Organization in General Intelligence (peer reviewed for Artificial General Intelligence, edited by Goertzel and Pennachin)
Yudkowsky, Cognitive Biases Potentially Affecting Judgment of Global Risks (peer reviewed for Global Catastrophic Risks, edited by Bostrom & Cirkovic)
Yudkowsky, Artificial Intelligence as a Positive and Negative Factor in Global Risk (peer reviewed for Global Catastrophic Risks, edited by Bostrom & Cirkovic)
Yudkowsky, Complex Value Systems are Required to Realize Valuable Futures (peer reviewed for Proceedings of the 4th Internation Conference on Artificial General Intelligence, edited by Schmidhuber et al.)
2012 peer reviewed publications (4 so far):
Muehlhauser & Salamon, Intelligence Explosion: Evidence and Import (peer reviewed for The Singularity Hypothesis: A Scientific and Philosophical Assessment, edited by Eden et al.)
Muehlhauser & Helm, The Singularity and Machine Ethics (peer reviewed for The Singularity Hypothesis: A Scientific and Philosophical Assessment, edited by Eden et al.)
Shulman & Bostrom, How Hard is Artificial Intelligence? Evolutionary Arguments and Selection Effects (peer reviewed for Journal of Consciousness Studies)
Bostrom & Yudkowsky, The Ethics of Artificial Intelligence (peer reviewed for The Cambridge Handbook to Artificial Intelligence, edited by Ramsey & Frankish)
Update:
Well, due to the endless delays of the academic publishing world, many of these peer-reviewed publications have been pushed into 2013. Thus, SI research fellows’ peer-reviewed 2012 publications were:
Shulman & Bostrom, How Hard is Artificial Intelligence? Evolutionary Arguments and Selection Effects (peer reviewed for Journal of Consciousness Studies)
Sotala, Advantages of artificial intelligences, uploads and digital minds (peer reviewed for International Journal of Machine Consciousness)
Sotala, Coalescing minds: brain uploading-related group mind scenarios (peer reviewed for International Journal of Machine Consciousness)
Armstrong & Sotala, How We’re Predicting AI – or Failing to (peer reviewed for the Beyond AI Conference Proceedings)
(Kaj Sotala was hired as a research fellow in late 2012.)
And, SI research associates’ peer-reviewed 2012 publications were:
Yampolskiy & Fox, Safety Engineering for Artificial General Intelligence (peer reviewed for Topoi)
Dewey, A Representation Theorem for Decisions About Causal Models (peer reviewed for AGI-12 Conference Proceedings)
Hibbard, Avoiding Unintended AI Behaviors (peer reviewed for AGI-12 Conference Proceedings)
Hibbard, Decision Support for Safe AI Design (peer reviewed for AGI-12 Conference Proceedings)
Some peer-reviewed articles (supposedly) forthcoming in 2013 from SI research fellows and associates are:
Muehlhauser & Helm, The Singularity and Machine Ethics. (Singularity Hypotheses)
Bostrom & Yudkowsky, The Ethics of Artificial Intelligence (Cambridge Handbook of Artificial Intelligence)
Muehlhauser & Salamon, Intelligence Explosion: Evidence and Import (Singularity Hypotheses)
Yampolskiy & Fox, Artificial General Intelligence and the Human Mental Model (Singularity Hypotheses)
Muehlhauser & Bostrom, Why We Need Friendly AI (Think)
Shulman, Could we use untrustworthy human brain emulations to make trustworthy ones? (Journal of Experimental & Theoretical Artificial Intelligence)
and others...