Self-Modification of Policy and Utility Function in Rational Agents
May 10, 2016 Β· Declared Dead Β· π Artificial General Intelligence
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Authors
Tom Everitt, Daniel Filan, Mayank Daswani, Marcus Hutter
arXiv ID
1605.03142
Category
cs.AI: Artificial Intelligence
Citations
32
Venue
Artificial General Intelligence
Last Checked
4 months ago
Abstract
Any agent that is part of the environment it interacts with and has versatile actuators (such as arms and fingers), will in principle have the ability to self-modify -- for example by changing its own source code. As we continue to create more and more intelligent agents, chances increase that they will learn about this ability. The question is: will they want to use it? For example, highly intelligent systems may find ways to change their goals to something more easily achievable, thereby `escaping' the control of their designers. In an important paper, Omohundro (2008) argued that goal preservation is a fundamental drive of any intelligent system, since a goal is more likely to be achieved if future versions of the agent strive towards the same goal. In this paper, we formalise this argument in general reinforcement learning, and explore situations where it fails. Our conclusion is that the self-modification possibility is harmless if and only if the value function of the agent anticipates the consequences of self-modifications and use the current utility function when evaluating the future.
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