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RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN NATIVE INTELLIGENCE (NI) AND ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE (AI): AN OVERVIEW

Bawallah Musa Adesola (), Kehinde Odole, Stephen Olubusola Ilugbo, Ojo Omonijo Dare, Owele Boye Agatha and Hadiza Mali Bukar
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Bawallah Musa Adesola: Department of Applied Geophysics, Federal University of Technology Akure
Kehinde Odole: St. Peters Unity Secondary School, Akure, Ondo State Nig
Stephen Olubusola Ilugbo: Department of Physics, Lead City University Ibadan
Ojo Omonijo Dare: Department of Sociology, Hallmark University, Ijebu-Itele, Ogun State
Owele Boye Agatha: Guidance and Counseling Unit, Student Affairs Division, Federal University of Technology Akure
Hadiza Mali Bukar: Department of Public Admin, Yobe State University, Damaturu

Acta Informatica Malaysia (AIM), 2024, vol. 8, issue 1, 19-21

Abstract: Western Ideologists tend to attribute Native Intelligence (NI) to Africans / third-word concepts, indistinctly fixed to value and belief that aided social cultural, religious, political economic, spiritual evolution, and ancient societies, However, the Emergence of Artificial intelligence (AI) being the capacity of a computer system or machine to mimic human cognitive such as learning and solving problems, through a computer system that uses mathematics and logic, to simulate the reasoning ability of man, through the process of learning from new information, and transforming such information into actions, by making decisions that has increasingly enhanced the quality of human life. Therefore, researchers, are also of the school of thought that there cannot be a future without the past; and hence the purpose of this research is to take an overview of the relationship that may have existed between Native intelligence (NI) and Artificial Intelligence (AI), to harness the gains of the former development, growth, and performance of the later for the benefit of mankind. Opinion samples were carried out in five selected higher institutions in the southwestern part of Nigeria, namely; the Federal University of Technology, Akure; Adeyemi College/University of Education Ondo; Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife; Ekiti State University, Ado-Ekiti; University of Education, Ikere-Ekiti.. The questions determined during the survey was categorized into three (3); namely (a) YES, (b) NO, and (c) UNDECIDED. The statistical analysis of results indicated: 60.2,24.8,15%,63.4, 25.2%, 11.4% for Ondo; 64.1%, 23.7%, 12.2, for Osun; 74.0%, 18.4%, 7.6%, and61.8%, 22.8%, 15.4%, for Ekiti State with an overall cumulative average of 64.7%, 23.0%, and 12.3%. The findings show that Native Intelligence played a significant role in the development of Artificial Intelligence.

Keywords: Native Intelligence; Artifical Intelligence. Higher Institution (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2024
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:zib:zbnaim:v:8:y:2024:i:1:p:19-21

DOI: 10.26480/aim.01.2024.19.21

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