Emotion, Cognition and Artificial Intelligence

Some have claimed that since machines lack emotional “qualia”, or conscious experiences of emotion, machine intelligence will fall short of human intelligence. I examine this objection, ultimately finding it unpersuasive. I first discuss recent work on emotion (from cognitive science, neuroscience and philosophy) that suggests that emotion plays various roles in cognition. I then raise the following question: are phenomenal experiences of emotion an essential or necessary component of the performance of these cognitive abilities? I then sharpen the question by distinguishing between four possible positions one might take. I reject one of these four positions largely on empirical grounds. But the remaining three positions all suggest that even if emotional qualia play an important role in human cognition, emotional qualia are not essential to the performance of these cognitive abilities in principle, so, e.g., a machine that lacks emotional qualia might still be able to perform them.

[1]  Sarah Bate,et al.  Covert recognition relies on affective valence in developmental prosopagnosia: evidence from the skin conductance response. , 2012, Neuropsychology.

[2]  Kenneth M. Ford,et al.  The Robot's Dilemma Revisited , 1994 .

[3]  W. James,et al.  What Is an Emotion , 1977 .

[4]  W. James II.—WHAT IS AN EMOTION ? , 1884 .

[5]  M. Nussbaum Upheavals of Thought: The Intelligence of Emotions , 2001 .

[6]  Markus Junghöfer,et al.  Selective Visual Attention to Emotion , 2007, The Journal of Neuroscience.

[7]  Zhengyou Zhang,et al.  A Survey of Recent Advances in Face Detection , 2010 .

[8]  Jason Megill,et al.  Easy's Gettin' Harder All the Time: The Computational Theory and Affective States , 2005 .

[9]  Sarah Bate,et al.  Face Recognition and its Disorders , 2012 .

[10]  G JEFFERSON,et al.  The Mind of Mechanical Man* , 1949, British medical journal.

[11]  R. Sousa The rationality of emotion , 1991 .

[12]  D. Rubin,et al.  Mental Hoop Diaries: Emotional Memories of a College Basketball Game in Rival Fans , 2010, The Journal of Neuroscience.

[13]  Rj Dolan,et al.  Phantoms in the brain: Probing the mysteries of the human mind , 1998 .

[14]  M. Cabanac What is emotion? , 2002, Behavioural Processes.

[15]  David C Rubin Emotion and autobiographical memory: considerations from posttraumatic stress disorder. , 2010, Physics of life reviews.

[16]  Matthias M. Müller,et al.  Selective Attention to Task-Irrelevant Emotional Distractors Is Unaffected by the Perceptual Load Associated with a Foreground Task , 2012, PloS one.

[17]  Todd C. Moody Conversations with zombies. , 1994 .

[18]  M. Nussbaum,et al.  Upheavals of Thought: The Romantic Ascent: Emily Brontë , 2001 .

[19]  Luis Carretié,et al.  Automatic attention to emotional stimuli: Neural correlates , 2004, Human brain mapping.

[20]  R. Desousa The Rationality of Emotion , 1990 .

[21]  A. M. Turing,et al.  Computing Machinery and Intelligence , 1950, The Philosophy of Artificial Intelligence.

[22]  Martha C. Nussbaum Upheavals of Thought: Frontmatter , 2001 .

[23]  F SCHILLER,et al.  Consciousness Reconsidered , 1993, IEEE Expert.

[24]  J. Fodor The Mind Doesn't Work That Way : The Scope and Limits of Computational Psychology , 2000 .

[25]  Cognitive Theories of Emotion , 1989 .

[26]  Thomas W. Polger,et al.  Zombies and the function of consciousness , 1995 .

[27]  A. M. Turing,et al.  Computing Machinery and Intelligence , 1950, The Philosophy of Artificial Intelligence.

[28]  M. Bradley,et al.  Motivated attention: Affect, activation, and action. , 1997 .

[29]  John McCarthy,et al.  SOME PHILOSOPHICAL PROBLEMS FROM THE STANDPOINT OF ARTI CIAL INTELLIGENCE , 1987 .

[30]  Boer Deng,et al.  THE ROBOT'S DILEMMA , 2015 .

[31]  Peter J. Lang,et al.  Attention and Orienting : Sensory and Motivational Processes , 1997 .