An easy basic test of whether humans are currently the limiting factor in a process is to ask whether the labs run all night, with researchers sometimes standing idle until the results come in [...]
That "incorrectly" bundles culture in with the human engineers.
To separate the improving components (culture, machines, software) from the relatively static ones (systems based on human DNA) you would have to look at the demand for uncultured human beings. There are a few natural experiments in this area out there - in the form of feral children. Demand for these types of individual appears to rarely be a limiting factor in most enterprises. It is clear that progress is driven by systems that are themselves progressing and improving.
As for computers - they may not typically be on the critical path as often as humans, but that doesn't mean that their contributions to progress are small. What it does mean is that they have immense serial speed. That is partly because we engineered them to compensate for our weaknesses.
If you know about computers operating with high serial speed, then observing that computers are waiting around for humans more than humans are waiting around for computers tells you next to nothing about their relative contributions to making progress. This proposed test is too "basic" to be of much use.
Other ways of comparing the roles of men and machines involve looking at their cost and/or their weight. However you look at it, the influence of the tech domain today on progress is hard to ignore. If someone were to take Intel's tools away from its human employees, its contributions to making progress would immediately halt.
Summary: Intelligence Explosion Microeconomics (pdf) is 40,000 words taking some initial steps toward tackling the key quantitative issue in the intelligence explosion, "reinvestable returns on cognitive investments": what kind of returns can you get from an investment in cognition, can you reinvest it to make yourself even smarter, and does this process die out or blow up? This can be thought of as the compact and hopefully more coherent successor to the AI Foom Debate of a few years back.
(Sample idea you haven't heard before: The increase in hominid brain size over evolutionary time should be interpreted as evidence about increasing marginal fitness returns on brain size, presumably due to improved brain wiring algorithms; not as direct evidence about an intelligence scaling factor from brain size.)
I hope that the open problems posed therein inspire further work by economists or economically literate modelers, interested specifically in the intelligence explosion qua cognitive intelligence rather than non-cognitive 'technological acceleration'. MIRI has an intended-to-be-small-and-technical mailing list for such discussion. In case it's not clear from context, I (Yudkowsky) am the author of the paper.
Abstract:
The dedicated mailing list will be small and restricted to technical discussants.
This topic was originally intended to be a sequence in Open Problems in Friendly AI, but further work produced something compacted beyond where it could be easily broken up into subposts.
Outline of contents:
1: Introduces the basic questions and the key quantitative issue of sustained reinvestable returns on cognitive investments.
2: Discusses the basic language for talking about the intelligence explosion, and argues that we should pursue this project by looking for underlying microfoundations, not by pursuing analogies to allegedly similar historical events.
3: Goes into detail on what I see as the main arguments for a fast intelligence explosion, constituting the bulk of the paper with the following subsections:
4: A tentative methodology for formalizing theories of the intelligence explosion - a project of formalizing possible microfoundations and explicitly stating their alleged relation to historical experience, such that some possibilities can allegedly be falsified.
5: Which open sub-questions seem both high-value and possibly answerable.
6: Formally poses the Open Problem and mentions what it would take for MIRI itself to directly fund further work in this field.