The Google X laboratory has
invented some pretty cool stuff: refrigerators that can order groceries
when your food runs low, elevators that can perhaps reach outer space,
self-driving cars. So it’s no surprise that their most recent design is
the most advanced, highest functioning, most awesome invention ever… a
computer that likes watching YouTube cats?
Okay, it’s a
bit more advanced than that. Several years ago, Google scientists began
creating a neural network for machine learning. The technique Google X
employed for this project is called the “deep learning,” a method
defined by its massive scale. In layman’s terms, they connected 16,000
computer processors and let the network they created roam free on the
Internet so as to simulate a human brain learning.
Stanford University computer scientist
Andrew Y. Ng, led the Google team in feeding the neural network 10
million random digital images from YouTube videos. The machine was not
“supervised,” i.e. it was not told what a cat is or what features a cat
has; it simply looked at the data randomly fed to it. Ng found that
there was a small part of the computer’s “brain” that taught itself to
recognize felines. “It basically invented the concept of a cat,” Google
fellow Jeff Dean told the New YorkTimes.
So Google may have created a machine
that can teach itself. But what Ng and his team have done is not as new
as you may think. Over the years, as the scale of software simulations
has grown, machine learning systems have advanced; last year, Microsoft
scientists suggested that the “deep learning” technique could be used to
build computer systems to understand human speech. This Google X
machine is the cream of the crop—twice as accurate as any other machine
before it. However, “it is worth noting that our network is still tiny
compared to the human visual cortex,” the researchers wrote, “which is a
million times larger in terms of the number of neurons and synapses.”
After “viewing” random pictures from
random YouTube videos, the neural network created a digital image of a
cat based on its “memory” of the shapes it saw in the images. The cat
the computer created is not any specific cat, but what the computer
imagines to be a cat. Plato had his Forms, and now Google has its computer-generated cat image.
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