Edge.org
Perhaps the most important news of our day is that datasets--not algorithms--might be the key limiting factor to development of human-level artificial intelligence. At the dawn of the field of artificial intelligence, in 1967, two of its founders famously anticipated that solving the problem of computer vision would take only a summer. Now, almost a half century later, machine learning software finally appears poised to achieve human-level performance on vision tasks and a variety of other grand challenges. What took the AI revolution so long? A review of the timing of the most publicized AI advances over the past thirty years suggests a provocative explanation: perhaps many major AI breakthroughs have actually been constrained by the availability of high-quality training datasets, and not by algorithmic advances.
Apr-24-2016, 17:15:59 GMT