Consumer, Home, and Recreation
Originating
Technology/NASA Contribution
Just before the space
shuttle reaches orbit, its three
main engines shut down so that it can achieve separation
from the massive external tank that provided the fuel
required for liftoff and ascent. In jettisoning the external
tank—which is completely devoid of fuel at this point
in the flight—the space shuttle fires a series of thrusters,
separate from its main engines, that gives the orbiter
the maneuvering ability necessary to safely steer clear
of the descending tank and maintain its intended flight
path. These thrusters make up the space shuttle’s Reaction
Control System.
While the space shuttle’s main engines only provide thrust
in one direction (albeit a very powerful thrust), the
Reaction Control System engines allow the vehicle to
maneuver in any desired direction (via small amounts
of thrust). The resulting rotational maneuvers are known
as pitch, roll, and yaw, and are very important in ensuring
that the shuttle docks properly when it arrives at the
International
Space Station and safely reenters the Earth’s
atmosphere upon leaving.
To prevent the highly complex Reaction Control System
from malfunctioning during space shuttle flights, and
to provide a diagnosis if such a mishap were to occur,
NASA turned to a method of artificial intelligence that
truly defied the traditional laws of computer science.
Partnership
Dr. Michael Georgeff, the inventor of the radical methodology,
is among the world’s leading experts in the research
and application of artificial intelligence. He is a former
director of both the Artificial Intelligence Center at
Stanford Research Institute (SRI) International, Menlo
Park, California, and the Australian Artificial Intelligence
Institute Ltd., at the University of Melbourne.
It was during Georgeff’s tenure with SRI in the early
1990s when NASA tapped his expertise to improve upon
the computers that monitor the shuttle fleet’s Reaction
Control System engines. NASA desired advanced computer
technology that could provide a variety of solutions
for the many things that could potentially go wrong during
a shuttle mission.
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Center:
Workers in the Orbiter Processing Facility watch
closely as Discovery’s Reaction Control System
is lowered into position in the orbiter’s forward
fuselage nose area. This system contains the engines
that provide the thrust for rotational maneuvers
and small velocity changes along the orbiter axis.
Top Left: Dr. Michael Georgeff, the inventor of
the real-time reasoning and control software that
monitors the space shuttle Reaction Control System.
Bottom Right: Staff members of weAttract.com, Inc.,
conduct research on a series of individual profiles. |
In response to NASA’s call for assistance, Georgeff and
his SRI team developed the first “intelligent agent”
software system to ever go into space. This system had
its own goals and beliefs, and could pursue these goals
and beliefs and then determine how it wanted to achieve
them, in much the same way that humans do. Essentially,
a computer equipped with this intelligent agent software
could make decisions and deal with problems through a
human-like power of reasoning. Should a first attempt
at a solution fail, it takes into account alternative
solutions, rather than it having to depend on a constrained,
preprogrammed set of parameters that only leads to one
attempted solution—as most conventional computers do.
By furnishing a computer with a human-like power of reasoning,
it ultimately assumes human-like logic and behavioral
traits.
Georgeff playfully acknowledges that this intelligent
agent is somewhat like a first version of HAL 9000—the
neurotic supercomputer from the science fiction movie
“2001, A Space Odyssey” that ends up endangering the
space crew’s lives for the sake of the mission—only this
time, he says, the true-to-life technology is fully under
the control of NASA astronauts in space and Mission Control
personnel on Earth.
Georgeff and NASA’s Johnson
Space Center worked together
to integrate the intelligent agent software system with
the space shuttle computers. This real-time reasoning
and control software was first used to monitor Discovery’s Reaction Control System in 1997.
Product Outcome
The intelligent agent software system utilized to monitor
Discovery’s Reaction Control System engines has come
down to Earth to improve the operation of a different
kind of engine: an online matchmaking search engine.
Founded in 1998 and incorporated in 2000, weAttract.com,
Inc., combines scientific and mathematical innovations
to enhance human relationships. The concepts that Georgeff
developed for NASA are at the core of the company’s computerized
matchmaking technology.
“Although on the surface this was unlike anything I had
been involved with before, the underlying issues were
similar to ones I have faced on many commercial projects,”
explains Georgeff, who currently resides as weAttract’s
executive scientific advisor. “Even with something as
complex as the space shuttle malfunction handling system
I worked with at NASA, the underlying system involves
helping create flexible avenues to meet goals. This was
at the heart of what the weAttract technology aimed to
do with relationships online.
“The work we are doing at weAttract has much in common
with the approach we used at NASA,” he continues. “The
key idea is to have some way of modeling human cognitive
and emotional attitudes so that we can predict [human]
behavior or determine how best [humans] can accomplish
their desires. In the NASA project, we used a very simple
model of these cognitive attitudes: the ‘desires’ of
the system were limited to the goals of closing valves,
testing fuel pressure, and so on. The system had
no emotions.”
For weAttract, on the other hand, the company has developed
“a very sophisticated model” of the cognitive and emotional
attitudes underlying human behavior, based on a large
number of psychological studies over many years. Its
approach is to give the person it is seeking to assist
(in this case, a person who has a desire to find an appropriate
partner) a number of questions and tests. The company
uses the output from these tests to logically and statistically
deduce the most likely cognitive and emotional model
for the person. Once it has this model, it can then determine
the best way for that person to achieve his or her desires.
In other words, by observing the person’s responses to
the tests, weAttract is able to deduce a psychological
model of that person, which—just like the system for
the space shuttle—the company can then use to determine
how best they can achieve their desires or goals. According
to Georgeff, the methods weAtrract uses to do this are
quite different from those used for the shuttle, but
the underlying scientific approach is the same.
The company then goes one step further. By questioning
the person on what type of partner they are seeking,
weAttract can also build a psychological model of the
preferred partner. This allows weAttract to find prospective
partners that match not only on basic demographic and
behavioral attitudes (e.g., non-smoking), but on a “rich
model of their cognitive and emotional makeup.”
By having the psychological models of both the seeker
and the potential partner, weAttract can then predict
how these two models would interact and behave together.
In this way, the company can identify potential strengths
and weaknesses in the partnership, and suggest means
for modifying behaviors to avoid problems and reducing
the impact of any incompatibilities.
“This is an incredibly exciting project,” Georgeff proclaims.
“I believe it is breaking new ground in understanding
how we, as humans, interact with one another and how
we can realize our personal and social potential.”
Match.com, the highly popular dating site with over 10
years of experience, began using weAttract’s software
in 2003. The result was a sophisticated personality matching
program that uses “smart” algorithms to customize a test
for each user, so that each answer leads to a tailored
follow-up question; no two tests are exactly alike.
“The Match.com Personality Test was a quantum leap beyond
the pop-psych questionnaires you’ll find on other personals
sites,” says Dr. Mark Thompson, the founder and chief
executive officer of weAttract, as well as a Stanford
University-trained clinical psychologist. “There were
no pre-canned reports,” he adds. “In fact, there
were over 100 million possible customized reports that
went into great detail about the user’s strengths and
quirks, and how to find someone who really ‘gets you’
on a deep level.”
In 2004, weAttract launched its second-generation product
for Yahoo! Personals, which includes the Personality & Love
Style Test and the Relationship Test. Based on weAttract’s
mathematical and scientific prowess, these tests use
interactive reenactments of real-life relationship scenarios,
instead of static multiple-choice questions.
The Personality & Love Style Test, which takes approximately
10 minutes to complete, provides singles with a customized
report of their personality type, love style, biggest
challenges, and suggestions on which type of person would
be a good fit for them. The Relationship Test, which
takes roughly 30 minutes to complete, provides a personalized,
in-depth report that measures compatibility with others,
relationship skills, and much more.
Presently, the insights gained from weAttract’s matching
endeavors have led it to form two new spinoff companies.
The first, called SciencePlanet.com, aims to expand weAttract’s
focus on educational tools and engines for the general
public. The second, yet to be named, will work to apply
the advances weAttract has made in facial recognition
and personality profiling to areas of national security
and defense.
Yahoo!® is a registered trademark of Yahoo! Inc.
Match.com©
is a copyright of Match.com, LP.


