Search Good Practices and Resources
From Cambridge: Handbook of Artificial Intelligence (draft): The Ethics of Artificial Intelligence
Creating thinking machines gives rise to ethical issues, from ensuring that they do not harm humans and other morally relevant beings, and to the moral status of the machines themselves.
From Google: A free 15 hour practical introduction to machine learning
A free machine learning crash course and self-study guide for aspiring machine learning practitioners, featuring a series of lessons with video lectures, real world case studies and hands-on practical exercises.
Best of experiments with Google: Autodraw
AutoDraw is a drawing project that pairs the magic of machine learning with drawings from talented artists to help everyone create anything visual, fast. Over 800,000 views.
Best of experiments with Google: Giorgio Cam
Take a picture to make music with the computer to see one of the ways that ML works. About 200,000 views.
Best of experiments with Google: The Infinite Drum Machine
This experiment uses machine learning to organize thousands of everyday sounds by placing similar sounds closer together. About 100,00 views.
Best of experiments with Google: Teachable Machine
This experiment enables computers to recognize images, sounds and poses while teaching students about machine learning. About 300,000 views.
Best of experiments with Google: Emoji Scavenger Hunt
Uses a treasurer hunt and a smart phone to challenge users to find the real world version of the emojis that they use online every day. About 100,000 views.
Best of experiments with Google: Move Mirror
A fun AI experiment where you move, your webcam views your moves and AI searches 80,000 images and then the images move with you. About 100,000 views.
Best of experiments with Google: Scribbling Speech
Speech input, machine learning and recurrent neural networks for image generation allow to computer generate complex imaginary worlds that follow the narrator and thus create complex animations controlled by linguistic structures.
Best of experiments with Google: Music: Semi-Conductor
Conduct your own orchestra in the browser by moving your arms to change the tempo, volume and instrumentation of a piece of music!