Resumen:
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[EN] The notion of a universal intelligence test has been recently advocated as a means to assess humans,
non-human animals and machines in an integrated, uniform way. While the main motivation has been the
development ...[+]
[EN] The notion of a universal intelligence test has been recently advocated as a means to assess humans,
non-human animals and machines in an integrated, uniform way. While the main motivation has been the
development of machine intelligence tests, the mere concept of a universal test has many implications
in the way human intelligence tests are understood, and their relation to other tests in comparative
psychology and animal cognition. From this diversity of subjects in the natural and artificial kingdoms,
the very possibility of constructing a universal test is still controversial. In this paper we rephrase the
question of whether universal intelligence tests are possible or not into the question of how universal
intelligence tests can be, in terms of subjects, interfaces and resolutions. We discuss the feasibility
and difficulty of universal tests depending on several levels according to what is taken for granted: the
communication milieu, the resolution, the reward system or the agent itself. We argue that such tests
must be highly adaptive, i.e., that tasks, resolution, rewards and communication have to be adapted
according to how the evaluated agent is reacting and performing. Even so, the most general expression
of a universal test may not be feasible (and, at best, might only be theoretically semi-computable).
Nonetheless, in general, we can analyse the universality in terms of some traits that lead to several levels
of universality and set the quest for universal tests as a progressive rather than absolute goal.
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Agradecimientos:
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This work was supported by the MEC/MINECO (projects CONSOLIDER-INGENIO CSD2007-00022 and TIN 2010-21062-C02-02), the GVA (project PROMETEO/2008/051) and the COST-European Cooperation in the field of Scientific and Technical ...[+]
This work was supported by the MEC/MINECO (projects CONSOLIDER-INGENIO CSD2007-00022 and TIN 2010-21062-C02-02), the GVA (project PROMETEO/2008/051) and the COST-European Cooperation in the field of Scientific and Technical Research (project IC0801 AT).
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