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posted by Fnord666 on Tuesday August 15 2017, @10:22PM   Printer-friendly
from the building-a-better-self dept.

Arthur T Knackerbracket has found the following story:

How far can it go? Will machines ever learn so well on their own that external guidance becomes a quaint relic? In theory, you could imagine an ideal Universal Learner—one that can decide everything for itself, and always prefers the best pattern for the task at hand.

But in 1996, computer scientist David Wolpert proved that no such learner exists. In his famous "No Free Lunch" theorems, he showed that for every pattern a learner is good at learning, there's another pattern that same learner would be terrible at picking up. The reason brings us back to my aunt's puzzle—to the infinite patterns that can match any finite amount of data. Choosing a learning algorithm just means choosing which patterns a machine will be bad at. Maybe all tasks of, say, visual pattern recognition will eventually fall to a single all-encompassing algorithm. But no learning algorithm can be good at learning everything.

This makes machine learning surprisingly akin to the human brain. As smart as we like to think we are, our brains don't learn perfectly, either. Each part of the brain has been delicately tuned by evolution to spot particular kinds of patterns, whether in what we see, in the language we hear, or in the way physical objects behave. But when it comes to finding patterns in the stock market, we're just not that good; the machines have us beat by far.

-- submitted from IRC


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  • (Score: 2) by Runaway1956 on Wednesday August 16 2017, @01:42PM

    by Runaway1956 (2926) Subscriber Badge on Wednesday August 16 2017, @01:42PM (#554708) Journal

    When you begin researching something, you generally don't KNOW what answers you're looking for, or even what KIND of answers. Neither will the computer, if it's functioning anything like a human mind. It's searching, and finding potential answers. So, it searches and searches, finds two, six, or twenty nice solutions, and confers with it's associates - much like we do. What's wrong with all of that?

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