How to Teach Artificial Intelligence Some Common Sense
Five years ago, the coders at DeepMind, a London-based artificial intelligence company, watched excitedly as an AI taught itself to play a classic arcade game. They'd used the hot technique of the day, deep learning, on a seemingly whimsical task: mastering Breakout,1 the Atari game in which you bounce a ball at a wall of bricks, trying to make each one vanish. Deep learning is self-education for machines; you feed an AI huge amounts of data, and eventually it begins to discern patterns all by itself. In this case, the data was the activity on the screen--blocky pixels representing the bricks, the ball, and the player's paddle. The DeepMind AI, a so-called neural network made up of layered algorithms, wasn't programmed with any knowledge about how Breakout works, its rules, its goals, or even how to play it.
Nov-13-2018, 13:22:34 GMT
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