this post was submitted on 25 Nov 2023
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Machine Learning

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[–] El_Minadero@alien.top 0 points 10 months ago (43 children)

I mean, everyone is just sorta ignoring the fact that no ML technique has been shown to do anything more than just mimic statistical aspects of the training set. Is statistical mimicry AGI? On some performance benchmarks, it appears better statistical mimicry does approach capabilities we associate with AGI.

I personally am quite suspicious that the best lever to pull is just giving it more parameters. Our own brains have such complicated neural/psychological circuitry for executive function, long and short term memory, types I and II thinking, "internal" dialog and visual models, and more importantly, the ability to few-shot learn the logical underpinnings of an example set. Without a fundamental change in how we train NNs or even our conception of effective NNs to begin with, we're not going to see the paradigm shift everyone's been waiting for.

[–] nemoknows@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago (8 children)

See the trouble with the Turing test is that the linguistic capabilities of the most sophisticated models well exceed those of the dumbest humans.

[–] COAGULOPATH@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago (1 children)

I think you have to use a reasonably smart human as a baseline, otherwise literally any computer is AGI. Babbage's Analytical Engine from 1830 was more intelligent than a human in a coma.

[–] AntDracula@alien.top 1 points 9 months ago

Ironically for robots and the like to truly be accepted, they will have to be coded to make mistakes to seem more human.

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