An interesting observation

My sister, Paula, made an interesting observation. By way of background, putting a hand on the other person’s back – or any body part, really – is a sign of dominance. A father puts his hand on the son’s shoulder, not the other way around; the homeowner puts her hand on the gardener’s arm to direct his attention. 

When Donald Trump, President of the United States, and   Kim Jong-un, Supreme Leader of North Korea, first made a joint press conference at Capella Resort, Singapore, Kim seemed completely out of his league. He had obviously had never been in front of a gaggle of press and photographers before, not one that large, at least. Trump looked like the kind father, hand on Kim’s back, guiding the naive newcomer around. By the last meeting, however, Kim was doing the guiding.   

Random Thoughts on Artificial Intelligence, Consciousness, and the Learning Curve.  

 Intelligence is the ability to learn or understand or to deal with new or trying situations. Merriam-Webster.

Me: OK Google, call Richard
Google Assistant: Richard Home or Richard Mobile?
Me: Home
Google Assistant: Home is in Portola Valley California

While driving somewhere, Michele and I will sometimes entertain ourselves by comparing the abilities of Google Assistant and Siri. It is fascinating what they can do and even more fascinating what they can’t do. Despite the above example, in almost all cases, OK Google understands better, and is more accurate and useful than Hey Siri.

I’ve read that Google is able to get better engineers because Google gives public credit to its engineers while Apple hides them behind the Apple Brand. For example, at Apple, a paper entitled An On-device Deep Neural Network for Face Detection is listed as written by the Computer Vision Machine Learning Team while, at Google, a paper entitled TFX: A TensorFlow-Based Production-Scale Machine Learning Platform – I have no idea what either title actually means, by the way – credits Akshay Naresh ModiChiu Yuen KooChuan Yu FooClemens MewaldDenis M. Baylor, Eric Breck, Heng-Tze Cheng, Jarek WilkiewiczLevent KocLukasz LewMartin A. ZinkevichMartin Wicke, Mustafa IspirNeoklis Polyzotis, Noah Fiedel, Salem Elie Haykal, Steven Whang, Sudip Roy, Sukriti RameshVihan JainXin Zhang, and Zakaria Haque. 

As an aside, when looking at the Google team, they are surprisingly diverse but only in strangely limited areas. The Google Team, which I picked more or less at random, is not a microcosm of America. When I go to the alphabetical Google People Directory, there is a large percentage of Indian names as well as Chinese, Pakistani, Iranian, and Arab names along with the expected European names. Even the CEO of Google, Sundar Pichaiand, was born in India. End aside. 

As another aside, Looking at that list of names above, which has so few women on it, I wonder if the fact that there are so few women in the High Tech biz is because Silicon Valley is populated by a high percentage of men from conservative cultures and they bring an unconscience bias against women. That said, I read that Google just hired two women to head all their Cloud Machine Learning technology; according to the Silicon Valley Business Journal, they are “Fei-Fei Li, who was director of AI at Stanford, and Jia Li, who was head of research at Snapchat’s parent company, Snap Inc”, so maybe, the times are a-changin’. End aside. 

Reading about AI, I realize that, when I think of Intelligence, I am really thinking of being conscious. Intellectually, I know that intelligence is not the same as consciousness, at least from the limited things I’ve read, but I find it very difficult to imagine intelligence without consciousness. It does make me feel better that I am not the only one making this mistake; certainly, HAL was conscience and Skynet, Ava in Em Machina for sure. When we drove through Georgia last fall, we asked Google Maps – with lots of double checking with Apple Maps – to plot a course diagonally across rural Georgia while staying off of highways. It did a super job but, in my imagination, at least, it is just a brute force problem, not Artificial Intelligence. Memorize every road in Georgia with its length, from intersection to intersection, crank in the speed limits of each section – speed limits which even my humble Hyundai knows – and calculate the fasted route. We did go by the world’s largest Peanut Monument and Google did take us through the very cute town of Colquitt, pop. 1,939, where I was able to buy an excellent cappuccino, but I think these were artifacts of the route and Google did not think: Oh, I’ll take him by the Peanut Monument and through Colquitt because it is the only place in rural Georgia he can get a cappuccino.  

On the other hand, when Google DeepMind taught itself to play Go and then beat Go master Lee Sedol in four out of five games, there was a lot more than brute force going on. A disclaimer here, I know nothing about Go, except that I have read that it is much more complicated than chess. Like chess, every move opens the door to many more moves, except in Go, the number of moves starts to approach the infinite. I read that there are more possible moves than all the atoms in the universe, so it is impossible for DeepMind to memorize all the moves, the program had to actually think about what move would be best. One of the things I found most amazing while reading about DeepMind vs. Sedol is that DeepMind made many unconventional moves that nobody had ever seen or thought of before and Sedol says that he learned to think out of the box more by playing DeepMind.  

Years ago, when I was an Industrial Psych major, the thinking was that the Learning Curve was not a smooth curve but a curve broken up by a series of plateaus. Sort of analogous to the evolutionary theory of Punctuated Equilibrium in biology. Change happens, we settle into the new reality, and then we have a jump to another new reality. That way of looking at learning is not as popular as it was but, after looking at the recent Google demo, it seems to me that is what is happening in Machine Learning and Artificial Intelligence (I put both down because I’m not sure of the difference). We are making a jump to a new reality. 

Baby Artichokes

Yesterday was Election Day here and, from my point of view, it was a mixed bag so I want to change the subject. Let’s talk about baby artichokes. A couple of weekends ago, one of our favorite Farmer’s Market vendors suggested we try his baby artichokes. We got a couple and steamed them. We let them cool, peeled off a couple of the hard outer leaves, bit in. Wow!, it was an unexpected delight, the bottom 3/4s of what is left is all editable and delicious. If you get a chance, check it out.   

Sanity and other people

I don’t believe it’s possible to have a disembodied intelligence without a physical connection to reality. Everything we think, everything in our thought processes is built around being in touch with reality. Even the word “touch”…Rodney Brooks, former director of the MIT Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory, founder and former Chief Technical Officer of iRobot and co-Founder, Chairman and Chief Technical Officer of Rethink Robotics

I first heard of Rodney Brooks in 1997 when I saw him in Errol Morris’s Fast, Cheap & Out of Control. In it, Brooks talks about making simple, cheap, insect-like, robots with closed circuitry that didn’t work on paper (it was ten years ago that I saw the movie and I am technically way over my head so I may have misremembered some of this). The robots kept falling down and bumping into walls but as they did they started self-correcting; soon they were walking and not bumping into walls. Their learning was shaped by an external reality.  

We humans, Homo sapiens, are social animals and we are shaped by our social environment as well as our physical environment. Not just growing up but as grown-ups. Hermits aren’t hermits because they are weird, they become weird because they have no social environment to bump into to keep them reasonable. People who live alone, like the uni-bomber, become strange; if they started strange, they become stranger living alone; isolated. Because dictators are usually behind a wall of courtesans, in a very real way, they are also alone which, I think, is why so many of them spiral into increasingly extreme behavior. They are alone because nobody is pushing back everybody is unctuously agreeing.

I think this isolation, surrounded by toadies and fixers, is the way Trump ran his business and, increasingly, the Trump Presidency. Extrapolating, this is the problem with the closed feedback loop of Facebook. Only hearing our side of the story makes us crazy.