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this post was submitted on 22 Feb 2024
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I'm so confused about how AI learning is supposed to work. Does it just need any data at all in significant quantity, is the quality of the data almost irrelevant? Because otherwise surely they could just feed it back issues of scientific American, or the scanned copies of the library of congress, I can't reasonably believe that Reddit is going to add anything unless it's just pure on adulterated quantity that's important.
The part you're missing is the metadata. AI (neural networks, specifically) are trained on the data as well as some sort of contextal metadata related to what they're being trained to do. For example, with reddit posts they would feed things like "this post is popular", "this post was controversial", "this post has many views", etc. in addition to the post text if they wanted an AI that could spit out posts that are likely to do well on reddit.
Quantity is a concern; you need to reach a threshold of data which is fairly large to have any hope of training an AI well, but there are diminishing returns after a certain point. The more data you feed it the more you have to potentially add metadata that can only be provided by humans. For instance with sentiment analysis you need a human being to sit down and identify various samples of text with different emotional responses, since computers can't really do that automatically.
Quality is less of a concern. Bad quality data, or data with poorly applied metadata will result in AI with less "accuracy". A few outliers and mistakes here and there won't be too impactful, though. Quality here could be defined by how well your training set of data represents the kind of input you'll be expecting it to work with.
The way I'm reading this, ai is just shit loads of if statements, not some intelligence. It's all garbage.
Its not if statements anymore, now its just a random number generator + a lot of multiplication put through a sigmoid function. But yea, of course there is not intelligence to it. Its extreme calculus
You're not entirely wrong. It's more like a series of multi-dimensional maps with hundreds or thousands of true/false pathways stacked on top of each other, then carved into by training until it takes on a shape that produces the 'correct' output from your inputs.
If you wanted the AI to just create book-like texts than you could train it purely on books from a library but if you want it to converse like a human being you need training data that imitates that.
But that's my point really it already talks like a human. My guess is they feed it on hours and hours and hours of podcasts because that tends to be the manner in which it communicates. I don't see how Reddit really adds to this.
I doubt its trained on podcasts, seeing as they would need subtitles, and current automated subtitling is not that good.