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AI WILL NEVER THINK LIKE A HUMAN... AND THAT'S OKAY

BBC Science Focus

|

June 2022

There's no point getting frustrated with artificial intelligence when it doesn't do what we expect it to. Instead, we should focus on the ways it can help and support people

- DR KATE DARLING

AI WILL NEVER THINK LIKE A HUMAN... AND THAT'S OKAY

Since the start of the pandemic, AI developers have deployed hundreds of machine learning tools to help diagnose COVID-19. The promise: to find patterns in the medical data like an algorithmic version of the television character Dr House. Recently, researchers have discovered that these AI tools were overhyped. Instead of discovering relevant connections between cases, the algorithms were making a litany of false assumptions, including predicting COVID cases based on the text font that hospitals happened to use in their documents.

This does not mean that machine learning is useless. It means that we need to better understand the strengths and limitations of AI.

To a human, it's obvious that a text font is not a good predictor for infectious diseases. But to a machine, that's not obvious at all. AI may be able to use informational input to make predictions, but it's not aware of what it's doing. It doesn't understand concepts or context, and is easily thrown off by biased or mislabelled data that wouldn't fool a four-year-old. As machine learning expert Janelle Shane explains in her AI weirdness book You Look Like A Thing And I Love You, the mistakes machines make feel absurd to us because they don't perceive the world like we do.

FLERE HISTORIER FRA BBC Science Focus

BBC Science Focus

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time to read

1 mins

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In the 1980 film Star Wars: The Empire Strikes Back, Han Solo and friends try to escape pursuing imperial forces by flying through an asteroid field. Droid C-3PO remarks, \"the odds of successfully navigating an asteroid field is approximately 3,720 to 1\". The scene depicts a chaotic, dense field of rocks swirling and spinning through space. This scenario has been played out many times in the cinema.

time to read

1 min

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BBC Science Focus

BBC Science Focus

HOW CAN I BE MORE PERSUASIVE?

Most of us like to think we're rational people. If someone shows us evidence that we're wrong, we'll change our minds, right? Well, not necessarily, because it's not always that simple. Being wrong feels uncomfortable and sometimes threatening. That's why changing someone's mind is often much harder than it seems.

time to read

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BBC Science Focus

BBC Science Focus

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BBC Science Focus

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BBC Science Focus

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TB is surging. Should we be worried?

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time to read

4 mins

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BBC Science Focus

BBC Science Focus

I survived the worst fire in the history of space exploration and had to keep it a secret

Astronaut Jerry Linenger opens up about one of the worst accidents in space, and the cover-up that followed

time to read

1 mins

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