Categories
Artificial Intelligence Education Innovation Network Reading

Latest Read: The AI Delusion

The AI Delusion by Gary Smith. Gary holds a Ph.D. in Economics is a professor Economies at Pomona College. He was a 1967 Woodrow Wilson Fellow and a 1968 Yale University Fellow. He was awarded a Stanford Research Institute Grant in 1978 and a NSF grant for an economics computer lab beginning in 1995.

The AI Delusion by Gary Smith

Gary certainly provides a solid narrative that artificial intelligence is not perfect. On the contrary, it is quite far from perfect. As a result, we should be aware of how much blind faith is given to so many artificial intelligence services. We do this at our own peril.

IBM’s Watson is an example. Gary explains why Watson, a question-answering computer system capable of answering questions posed in natural language is a bad match for healthcare but can be an absolutely wonderful solution in other markets.

The AI Delusion certainly also reveals how many times artificial intelligence systems have simply failed. These lead to important lessons. At the same, time Gary does acknowledge that today’s machine learning has solved problems thought impossible just twenty years ago.

For example, the Obama campaigns in 2008 and his 2012 re-election deployed data analytics that were critical in his win and re-election. Yet, the Hilary Clinton campaign followed data insights from a machine learning system named Ada. This big data system advised against campaigning in Michigan and other states. This so upset former President Bill Clinton that he attempted to persuade the campaign to change strategy, however he was overruled by Ada. A powerful example of big data going off the tracks.

Gary is certainly acknowledging that machines in the future will have the ability to think, however today many are mislead by deep neural networks. Many on the surface associate brain neurons to artificial intelligence’ neural networks. Neural networks do not mimic the brain. Neural networks are indeed powerful programs that execute complex mathematical programs. However, today’s neural networks do not understand words, or images.

Categories
Artificial Intelligence Education Innovation Reading Technology TED

Latest Read: Hello World

Hello World: Being Human in the Age of Algorithms by Hannah Fry, Today Hannah is a senior lecturer at University College London’s Centre for Advanced Spatial Analysis.

Hello World Being Human in the Age of Algorithms by Hannah Fry

Generally speaking, Hannah has written a wonderful book addressing algorithms and artificial intelligence. Society has certainly fallen behind the moral implications of algorithms and Hannah speaks truth to power.

Above all, do not let the idea of learning about algorithms, artificial intelligence, or machine learning intimate you. Hannah explains all of these terms with easy to understand examples. This is why her book is popular and well regarded.

I really appreciate how Hannah is addressing algorithm technology across the following chapters: Power, Data, Justice, Medicine, Cars, and Crime. However, I will save her best lesson for last.

Machines that see

So, Hannah reveals artificial intelligence allows a computer to identify dogs. Once a computer has identify over one million dog photos, artificial intelligence can identify dogs like an expert.

Yet, when applying this to breast cancer diagnosis the magic of machine learning can truly shine. Feed a computer millions images of breast cancer tissue images and a local doctor at a small community hospital in remote Iowa can tap into machine learning to help diagnose with a better degree of accuracy once only for a doctor with 20 years of breast cancer diagnosis at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York City.