TIME

THINKERS

Geoffrey Hinton

EMERITUS PROFESSOR | UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO

Over the course of February, Geoffrey Hinton, one of the most influential AI researchers of the past 50 years, had a “slow eureka moment.”

Hinton, 76, has spent his career trying to build AI systems that model the human brain, mostly in academia before joining Google in 2013. He had always believed that the brain was better than the machines that he and others were building, and that by making them more like the brain, they would improve. But in February, he realized “the digital intelligence we’ve got now may be better than the brain already. It’s just not scaled up quite as big.”

Developers around the world are currently racing to build the biggest AI systems that they can. At the current rate these models are growing, it could be less than five years until AI systems have 100 trillion connections—roughly as many as there are between neurons in the human brain.

Alarmed, Hinton left his post as VP and engineering fellow in May and gave a flurry of interviews in which he explained that he had left so he could speak freely on the dangers of AI—and on his regrets over helping bring that technology into existence. He worries about what could happen once AI systems are scaled up to the size of human brains—and the prospect of humanity being wiped out by the technology. “This stuff will get smarter than us and take over,” says Hinton. “And if you want to know what that feels like, ask a chicken.”

always fascinated Hinton, who was born and raised in England. As a Cambridge University undergraduate, he tried a range of subjects—physiology, physics, philosophy—before graduating with a degree in experimental psychology in 1970. Two years later he started a Ph.D. in AI at the

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from TIME

TIME3 min readGender Studies
Kathleen Hanna
You’ve been in the public eye since you founded your groundbreaking feminist punk band Bikini Kill, over 30 years ago. When did you decide to write your memoir? I started talking about it when I was maybe 40. Then I got sick with Lyme disease, and th
TIME6 min read
Titans
Last May, U.S. Surgeon General Vivek Murthy issued an advisory about the profound consequences of loneliness and isolation—a departure from the type of standard medical conditions his predecessors prioritized. While traveling the country, Murthy had
TIME2 min readPolitical Ideologies
The Party Of Mandela Fails To Deliver
The African National Congress has led South Africa’s government since the end of apartheid in 1994. But as voters go to the polls on May 29, there’s good reason to wonder whether the ANC might be in real trouble. During the ANC’s most recent term in

Related Books & Audiobooks