Dr. Stuart Armstrong
Stuart
Armstrong, D.Phil. is Research Fellow at
Future of Humanity Institute, Oxford University.
Stuart’s research at the Future of Humanity Institute centers on formal
decision
theory, the risks and possibilities of Artificial Intelligence, the long
term potential for intelligent life, and anthropic (self-locating)
probability.
He is particularly interested in finding decision processes
that give the “correct” answer under situations of anthropic ignorance
and ignorance of one’s own utility function, ways of mapping humanity’s
partially defined values onto an artificial entity, and the interaction
between various existential risks. He aims to improve the understanding
of the different types and natures of uncertainties surrounding human
progress in the mid-to-far future.
His Oxford D.Phil. was in parabolic geometry, calculating the holonomy
of projective and conformal Cartan geometries. He later transitioned
into computational biochemistry, designing several new ways to rapidly
compare putative bioactive molecules for virtual screening of medicinal
compounds.
Stuart authored
Chaining God:
A qualitative approach to AI, trust, and moral systems,
Utility Indifference,
Projective Holonomy I: Principles and Properties,
Projective Holonomy II: Cones and Complete Classifications,
and
Einstein connections and involutions via parabolic geometries
and coauthored
Thinking inside the box: using and
controlling an Oracle AI,
Einstein Metrics with Anisotropic Boundary Behavior,
Molecular similarity including chirality, and
ElectroShape: fast molecular similarity calculations incorporating
shape, chirality, and electrostatics.
Read the
full list of his publications!
Stuart is bilingual in French and English with conversational German.
Watch
Thinking inside the box: using and controlling an Oracle AI.
Read his
blog.