Machine Perception and Cognitive Design
Machines are getting smarter and that good news for cognitive designers. It increases the range of options we have for offloading mental effort from people to machines. Lowering the cognitive load on individuals and groups during work or play is an important trend in technology. Google helps us search the world’s information, eharmony helps us find a mate and our mobile phone helps us navigate. So I am always on the lookout for insights into the limits and trends of artificial intelligence that might be useful for designers.
Take, IBM’s 5 in 5 for example. They provide a short introduction into how machine perception will develop over the next five years. They look at emerging machine capabilities in all five human senses – vision, hearing, smell, touch and taste – in video and story map form. They offer predictions within the broader view of cognitive systems.
Bottom line – cognitive designers need to be up to speed on the costs, risks and functional capabilities of current and emerging capabilities in artificial intelligence. How else can we design for how minds (people and machine) really work?
Image Source: Innovations that will change our lives in the next five years.