Cognitive Revolution and the Age of AI

jiajiezhang

Perspectives about AI by Dr. Jiajie Zhang, Dean and Professor at the McWilliams School of Biomedical Informatics at UTHealth Houston

Episodes

  1. 5d ago

    Artificial General Intelligence (AGI ) Is A Category Error

    Artificial General Intelligence (AGI ) Is A Category Error AGI is not the future of intelligence. It is the last gasp of an outdated theory of intelligence. The AGI race is chasing a wrong object: the fantasy that intelligence lives inside an isolated mind and that the ultimate achievement is to rebuild that mind inside a machine. That premise is wrong. Civilization did not advance by making the individual mind more self-sufficient.Civilization advanced by moving cognition outside the skull. - Language made thought social - Writing externalized memory - Mathematics externalized reasoning - The internet made knowledge searchable and networked - AI makes cognitive artifacts active This is the real trajectory of intelligence: - Not inward. Outward. - Not individual. Distributed. - Not human versus machine. Human-AI-social-institutional systems. AGI is a category error because it mistakes one narrow historical theory of intelligence — the unaided individual mind performing alone — for intelligence itself.That model belongs to the examination hall, the IQ test, and the fantasy of the solitary genius. It does not describe how intelligence actually works in civilization.The frontier is not a synthetic person.The frontier is the design of high-performing cognitive ecologies: systems in which humans, AI, tools, representations, institutions, and environments generate better judgment, discovery, learning, governance, and adaptation than any individual mind or stand-alone model. The AGI is trying to build a machine mind when the real task is to redesign the architecture of intelligence itself.Intelligence has already escaped the human mind. The question is no longer whether machines will become generally intelligent.The question is whether we will design the distributed intelligence systems that come next. For the full argument, read my new article:“AGI Is a Category Error: Intelligence Has Already Escaped the Human Mind.” https://www.dcognition.ai/essays/agi-is-a-category-error.html

    18 min
  2. Apr 9

    Cognitive Revolution - How AI is Reorganizing Intelligence, Expertise, and Institutions

    This is the podcast for "The Cognitive Revolution - How AI is Reorganizing Intelligence, Expertise, and Institutions", 2026, Jiajie Zhang, Open Intelligence Press. Book Synopsis: Intelligence is no longer confined to the human mind. It is becoming shared, distributed, and increasingly close to free. This changes everything. For centuries, our institutions—universities, healthcare systems, corporations—have been built on a simple assumption: that intelligence resides within individuals. That assumption is now breaking. Artificial intelligence is not just automating tasks. It is transforming cognition itself—redistributing thinking across humans and machines, reshaping expertise, and challenging the foundations of how knowledge is created, evaluated, and applied. In Cognitive Revolution, Jiajie Zhang presents a powerful and original framework for understanding this shift. Intelligence is no longer an individual property—it is a system property. Expertise is shifting from knowledge possession to judgment and evaluation. Institutions must evolve from static structures to dynamic cognitive systems designed for a world where thinking is distributed. Drawing on decades of work in cognitive science, distributed cognition, and artificial intelligence, this book shows that the real disruption of AI is not efficiency—it is the reorganization of intelligence itself. Across education, research, decision-making, governance, and leadership, a consistent pattern emerges: cognition is moving from the individual to the system. What once happened inside the mind now unfolds through interaction between humans and intelligent systems. This book is for leaders navigating AI-driven transformation, educators rethinking learning, researchers and clinicians working with intelligent systems, and policymakers designing the next generation of institutions. It is for anyone seeking to understand not just what AI can do, but what it means for how we think. This is not a book about using AI. It is a book about designing intelligence. Because once intelligence becomes distributed, learning must be redesigned, expertise must be redefined, and institutions must be rebuilt. The question is no longer whether AI will transform our world. The question is: what kind of cognitive systems will we build?

    20 min
  3. 11/16/2025

    Redesign Healthcare Education in The Age of AI

    The podcast is based on the article by Dr. Jiajie Zhang, Dean and Dr. Susan Fenton, Vice Dean for Education at the McWilliams School of Biomedical Informatics at UTHealth Houston, which was published in npj Health Systems. It discusses the profound impact of Artificial Intelligence (AI) on healthcare education, framing it as a shift toward an AI-augmented future. This transformation is likened to historical economic shifts, suggesting that AI is initiating a "Cognitive Revolution" that frees humans from cognitive labor. The authors propose that education must evolve from traditional knowledge transfer to cultivating higher-order cognitive skills—such as ethical reasoning and critical thinking—that machines cannot easily replicate. They introduce the concept of Distributed Cognition, where human intelligence works synergistically with exponentially accelerating AI technology, emphasizing that AI serves as a unified, vast knowledge base. Finally, the text uses Biomedical Informatics as a case study to illustrate the transition from an interdisciplinary educational approach to one fully integrated with and augmented by AI. Note: This podcast was produced using Google NotebookLM and is based on the article “Preparing healthcare education for an AI-augmented future” by Zhang & Fenton (2024). The episode reflects AI-generated summaries and interpretations of the published work. Zhang, J., Fenton, S. H. (2024). Preparing healthcare education for an AI-augmentedfuture. npj Health Systems. https://doi.org/10.1038/s44401-024-00006-z.

    12 min
  4. 11/15/2025

    The Human Brain is Now Open Source

    This podcast is based on sources authored by Dr. Jiajie Zhang, Dean, Professor, and Glassell Family Foundation Distinguished Chair at McWilliams School of Biomedical Informatics at UTHealth Houston, consisting of excerpts from a written text and a YouTube video transcript. It offers an overview of the profound impact of Artificial Intelligence (AI) on healthcare and education. Both sources assert that the human brain is now open source, as intelligence is now shareable, scalable, and open source, dramatically transforming cognitive labor akin to how the steam engine transformed physical labor. The material highlights AI's superior performance in diagnosis, research (like protein folding), and academic benchmarks, arguing that institutions must adapt and integrate AI into their operations and governance to lead in this new era. Specifically, the sources detail how AI is reshaping patient care, streamlining hospital operations, and requiring a fundamental shift in educational curriculum toward human-AI collaboration. This podcast was produced using Google NotebookLM and is based on the following sources. The episode reflects AI-generated summaries and interpretations of the sources provided. (1) Presentation on September 24, 2025, "The Brain is Now Open Source: Building an AI-Native Health Science Institution.", by Jiajie Zhang https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xjxwTyJVd7A (2) Blog Article: September 30, 2025, "The Brain Is Now Open Source - Building an AI-Native Health Science Institution", by Jiajie Zhang https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/brain-now-open-source-building-ai-native-health-science-zhang-ea0yc/

    10 min
  5. AI Supremacy Is A Myth, But The AI Revolution Is Real

    11/15/2025

    AI Supremacy Is A Myth, But The AI Revolution Is Real

    The provided source, an excerpt from an essay by Jiajie Zhang, PhD, Dean, Professor, and Glassell Family Foundation Distinguished Chair at the McWilliams School of Biomedical Informatics at UTHealth Houston, argues that the notion of AI supremacy leading to an AI singularity is a myth because current AI, including large language models (LLMs), functions as a cognitive artifact that augments, rather than replaces, human intelligence. Dr. Zhang explains that throughout history, human tools have served as extensions of our minds, creating a distributed intelligence where biological brains and technological artifacts work in synergy. Although AI technology is accelerating rapidly and constitutes an AI Revolution as significant as the Agricultural or Industrial Revolutions, its purpose is to liberate us from cognitive labor and enhance our abilities, not to achieve independent supremacy over humanity, which he views as a misinterpretation of the relationship between humans and their creations. The author concludes that humanity must maintain a balanced perspective, ensuring AI serves and benefits people while valuing the unique qualities of the human mind. This podcast was produced using Google NotebookLM and is based on the following source. The episode reflects AI-generated summaries and interpretations of the sources provided. Blog Artible: September 6, 2024, "AI Supremacy is A Myth", by Jiajie Zhang https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/ai-supremacy-myth-jiajie-zhang-2ylfc/

    12 min

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Perspectives about AI by Dr. Jiajie Zhang, Dean and Professor at the McWilliams School of Biomedical Informatics at UTHealth Houston