Even young babies are aware of the basic physics of everyday objects:
Inspired by research into how infants learn, computer scientists have created a program that can pick up simple physical rules about the behaviour of objects — and express surprise when they seem to violate those rules. The results were published on 11 July in Nature Human Behaviour.
Developmental psychologists test how babies understand the motion of objects by tracking their gaze. When shown a video of, for example, a ball that suddenly disappears, the children express surprise, which researchers quantify by measuring how long the infants stare in a particular direction.
Luis Piloto, a computer scientist at Google-owned company DeepMind in London, and his collaborators wanted to develop a similar test for artificial intelligence (AI). The team trained a neural network — a software system that learns by spotting patterns in large amounts of data — with animated videos of simple objects such as cubes and balls.
[...] Developmental psychologists test how babies understand the motion of objects by tracking their gaze. When shown a video of, for example, a ball that suddenly disappears, the children express surprise, which researchers quantify by measuring how long the infants stare in a particular direction.
Luis Piloto, a computer scientist at Google-owned company DeepMind in London, and his collaborators wanted to develop a similar test for artificial intelligence (AI). The team trained a neural network — a software system that learns by spotting patterns in large amounts of data — with animated videos of simple objects such as cubes and balls.
Journal Reference:
Piloto, Luis S., Weinstein, Ari, Battaglia, Peter, et al. Intuitive physics learning in a deep-learning model inspired by developmental psychology [open], Nature Human Behaviour (DOI: 10.1038/s41562-022-01394-8)
(Score: 2) by legont on Saturday July 23 2022, @01:22AM (2 children)
Spotting patterns is not physics.
"Wealth is the relentless enemy of understanding" - John Kenneth Galbraith.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday July 23 2022, @08:23AM
Didn't you know? Physics is just a series of logic gates. You mean... you thought it was a simple irreducible truth?! You dumbass!
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday July 24 2022, @04:26AM
Babies understand quantum mechanics. If they can't see something it doesn't exist.
(Score: 2) by PiMuNu on Saturday July 23 2022, @10:07PM
Newton-Raphson solver can do this. Note it is named Newton after *the* Newton.
Artificial Stupidity.