What Machine Learning Is Teaching Us About Human Learning - InformED

#artificialintelligence 

Researchers have known that "artificial neurons" could carry out logical functions--i.e., learn the way humans do--since 1943. The term "artificial intelligence" has been around since its introduction at a science conference at Dartmouth University in 1956. But only in the past several years have we started seeing theory put into practice the way those researchers imagined. We now have machines that can translate languages, compose music, write novels, and operate vehicles. So what might the implications of these developments be for educators and students? The primary goal of AI research may be to teach machines how to learn, thereby automating some of the tasks that complicate our everyday lives, but brain scientists are saying it goes both ways: We now know more about human learning as a result of machine learning, and it has some exciting implications for the classroom.

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