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Living Intelligence

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Living Intelligence is the convergence of artificial intelligence, biotechnology, and advanced sensors.[1]

Overview

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The conceptual framework of Living Intelligence was introduced in 2024 with a report published by Amy Webb and Sam Jordan from Future Today Strategy Group.[2] The report described it as a convergence of three technologies (artificial intelligence, biotechnology, and advanced sensors) for systems capable of sensing, learning, adapting, and evolving.[3]

Living Intelligence relies on the interaction between AI systems (such as Large Action Models), sensor networks that collect and transmit data, and biological engineering applications which include generative biology.[4][5][6]

Applications

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Living Intelligence can be used in a variety of industries, including business and education.[1] In education, it focuses on human cognition to personalize learning experiences.[7] It can also assist in training AI models with empathy for applications of customer service and healthcare.[8]

Notable early developments in Living Intelligence include DishBrain, a biological computer created by Cortical Labs using brain cells,[9] and various applications of generative biology by companies like Ginkgo Bioworks[5] and Google DeepMind's AlphaProteo project.[1]

References

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  1. ^ a b c Webb, Amy (6 January 2025). "Why Living Intelligence is the Next Big Thing". Harvard Business Review.
  2. ^ "Exploring "Living Intelligence," a Merging of AI, Sensors, and Biotech". AOL. April 30, 2025.
  3. ^ "The Era of Living Intelligence" (PDF). Future Today Institute.
  4. ^ Rouleau, Nicolas; Levin, Michael (13 December 2024). "Discussions of machine versus living intelligence need more clarity". Nature.
  5. ^ a b Aiello, Chloe (11 December 2023). "This Futurist Predicts a Coming of Living Intelligence and AI Supercylce". Inc.
  6. ^ "2025 AI Predictions". Perplexity.
  7. ^ Allam, Hesham (January 2025). "The Role of AI and Living Intelligence in Higher Education: Potential Applications and Challenges". Research Gate.
  8. ^ Samradni (9 January 2025). "Will 2025 be the Era of Living Intelligence?". Analytics Insight.
  9. ^ Robitzski, Dan (12 October 2022). "How Neurons in a Dish Learned to Play "Pong"". The Scientist.