DARPA's Augmented Cognition Program The
Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) has been one of the primary funding agencies for augmented cognition investigators. A major focus of DARPA's augmented cognition program (AugCog) has been developing more robust tools for monitoring cognitive state and integrating them with computer systems. The program envisions "order of magnitude increases in available, net thinking power resulting from linked human-machine dyads [that] will provide such clear informational superiority that few rational individuals or organizations would challenge under the consequences of mortality." The program began in 2001, and has since be renamed to Improving Warfighter Information Intake Under Stress Program. By leveraging such tools, the program seeks to provide warfighters with enhanced cognitive abilities, especially under complex or stressful war conditions.
Translation engines Thad Starner, and the
American Sign Language (ASL) Research Group at Georgia Tech, have been researching systems for the recognition of ASL. Telesign, a one-way translation system from ASL to
English, was shown to have a 94% accuracy rate on a vocabulary with 141 signs.
Augmentation Factor Ron Fulbright proposed the
augmentation factor (A+), as a measure of the degree a human is cognitively enhanced by working in collaborative partnership with an artificial cognitive system (cog). If WH is the cognitive work performed by the human in a human-machine dyad, and WC is the cognitive work done by the cog then A+ = WC/WH. In situations where a human is working alone without assistance, then WC = 0 resulting in A+ = 0 meaning the human is not cognitively augmented at all. In situations where the human does more cognitive work than the cog, A+ + > 1. As cognitive systems continue to advance, A+ will increase. In situations where a cog performs all cognitive work without the assistance of a human, then WH = 0 resulting in A+ = meaning attempting to calculate the augmentation factor is nonsensical since there is no human involved to be augmented.
Human/Cog Ensembles Whereas DARPA's AugCog program focuses on human/machine dyads, it is possible for there to be more than one human and more than one artificial element involved.
Human/Cog Ensembles involve one or more humans working with one or more cognitive systems (cogs). In a human/cog ensemble, the total amount of cognitive work performed by the ensemble, W*, is the sum of the cognitive work performed by each of the N humans in the ensemble plus the sum of the cognitive work performed by each of the M cognitive systems in the ensemble: W* = \sum_{k=1}^NWkH + \sum_{k=1}^MWkC == Controversy ==