Concepts

Artificial Intelligence (AI)

CAPF wiki1 min read7 sections
At a glance
SubjectScience

Definition

The branch of computer science that builds machines and software able to perform tasks normally requiring human intelligence, such as learning, reasoning, recognising patterns, and understanding language.

Key points

  • Machine learning is a subset of AI in which systems learn patterns from data rather than following only fixed rules; deep learning uses multi-layered neural networks.
  • Generative AI (large language models, image generators) produces text, images, or code; these became widely used from the early 2020s.
  • Applications: facial recognition, language translation, medical diagnosis, autonomous vehicles, fraud detection, and surveillance.
  • Concerns include job displacement, algorithmic bias, deepfakes and misinformation, data privacy, and accountability for automated decisions.
  • Security relevance: AI aids border surveillance, predictive policing, and cyber-defence, but also enables new threats such as deepfakes and automated attacks; verify the latest on India's national AI policy and regulation.

Why it matters for CAPF

AI is a fast-rising science, technology, and current-affairs theme, with direct security applications (surveillance, cyber) and human-rights concerns (privacy, bias) that fit the CAPF lens.

Common confusion

AI is the broad field; machine learning is a subset, and deep learning a further subset. Generative AI creates new content, while traditional AI may only classify or predict.

One-line recall

Machines performing human-like tasks (learning, reasoning, language); machine learning and deep learning are its core methods, with surveillance and deepfake implications.

concept blockchain, concept semiconductors

Parent note

information technology and computing

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