UPDATE: Mar. 15, 2024, 12:59 p.m. EDT This piece was updated to include additional information provided to Mashable by Google DeepMind.
Computer-controlled video game characters aren't anything new. Non-playable characters or NPCs are longtime staples of gaming.
However, Google's AI research lab, DeepMind, has announcedwork on something distinct and new in computer-controlled gameplay: SIMA, which stands for Scalable Instructable Multiworld Agent.
Tweet may have been deleted
Unlike NPCs, Google DeepMind's AI-controlled gaming companion isn't programmed into a specific game to act a certain way or respond to certain human-provided actions. SIMA is, as DeepMind describes it, a "generalist AI agent for 3D virtual environments."
SIMA plays along with gamers, acting as a human player, by following verbal commands. As Google explains, "SIMA isn't trained to win a game." It's primed to work alongside the human player and perform actions based on natural language prompts.
This element is crucial to what makes SIMA unique. Again, SIMA isn't an NPC, designed specifically to a certain title, which is meant to provide a challenge to the player. SIMA acts as a fellow gamer trying to accomplish whatever the human player is telling it to do.
"SIMA needs only the images provided by the 3D environment and natural-language instructions given by the user," Google says. "With mouse and keyboard outputs, it is evaluated across 600 skills, spanning areas like navigation and object interaction - such as 'turn left' or 'chop down tree.'"
According to Google DeepMind, SIMA was trained and tested on nine different video game titles of varying gaming genres, including No Man’s Sky, Goat Simulator 3, Teardown, and Wobbly Life. The training does not require use of any sort of access to the games' source code or APIs. Google DeepMind saysit focused on open-play games over narrative ones to facilitate SIMA's training in more general gaming skills.
There are some positives, and some very obvious negatives, with SIMA. An AI gaming companion could be nice when an individual wants to play a multiplayer game or an offline two-player story-mode without another human around to pick a controller.
But, the ideas driving SIMA's research could obviously be used in bad faith, too. Gamers could use SIMA for an unfair advantage in online gameplay. Games where players have to perform monotonous tasks for resources or complete quests to gain XP could obviously be manipulated by a human just telling an AI companion to do all of that work for them.
Google DeepMind reached out to Mashable to share that it has those same concerns regarding unintended uses of SIMA, as many on the team are gamers or former game developers themselves.
DeepMind reiterated that SIMA is a research project and video games are the sandbox that the team is using to test the AI agent's abilities. DeepMind currently has no plans to make SIMA widely available and says it will make sure it does not contribute to the bot problem in gaming.
As Google shared, its video gaming playing AI agent is not being prepped for public use at this time. For now, it's still in the midst of learning to play new video games.
Copyright © 2023 Powered by
Google is training an AI to play video games — why this could be problematic-声闻过情网
sitemap
文章
28684
浏览
2
获赞
6
19 tweets about doing taxes to read while you procrastinate doing your taxes
We regret to inform you it's tax season once again.Sadly, every year the time comes when people mustGet up to 38% off tax software at Amazon: Save on H&R block, TurboTax, and more
SAVE AND FILE LIKE A PRO: With up to 38% off on tax software at Amazon, you can file like a pro andI'm 32. Xbox is barred from making X
In case you missed it, a massive ransomware attack hit Insomniac Games, the Sony-owned development sGoogle Search really has gotten worse. It's not just you.
UPDATE: Jan. 18, 2024, 12:49 p.m. EST Updated with comment from Google and additional context.Has yoReddit's former CEO slams Reddit for 'amplifying hate, racism and violence'
On Monday, Reddit CEO Steve Huffman posted an open letter to employees, saying that the company doesCES 2024: 3 wild TV trends we're expecting to see
CES 2024 is right around the corner, set to unveil some wild innovations — and mind-blowing TVWhy the Google Gemini Olympics ad failed
Artificial intelligence can do remarkable things, but a general consensus seems to have emerged abouThe Apple Watch ban is impacting repairs, too
The Apple Watch news keeps getting worse and weirder.Just a day after a ban on direct sales from AppGmail's compose button on Android gets bigger, but only when you scroll down
Gmail's compose button is annoyingly small and unintuitive on phones. You may have not noticed it, bApple's spruced up Apple TV app looks way more like Netflix now
Apple has given its Apple TV app a little spruce, with the company unveiling a redesigned platform tPublic Domain Day 2024 list: 12+ books, movies and songs entering the public domain
Jan. 1, 2024 is Public Domain Day in the United States — the day a bunch of artwork from the pBest earbuds deal: Beats earbuds up to 47% off
Give the gift of earbuds on sale at Amazon that will arrive before December 25. Today's best Beats EThe best of Martha Stewart's deeply weird personal Instagram account
To truly understand the heart of Martha Stewart, you need to dig deep into her personal Instagram acApple Pay: You can finally use it at this popular home
Lowe's finally hopped aboard the Apple Pay bandwagon. According to MacRumors, the home improvement sThe best of CES 2024
CES 2024has been a whirlwind for the Mashable team. Some products were bizarre, including the WeHead