Considering new claims in facial recognition, there should be no reason why AI 
would not recognize a cat as a cat. However, morphing a cat to the point of it 
not resembling a cat, would still prove AI correct, because it would correctly 
point out that the object wasn't recognizable as a cat. The same argument could 
be applied to human beings being deformed to resemble non humans, and so on.

________________________________
From: Matt Mahoney <[email protected]>
Sent: Thursday, 07 January 2021 21:29
To: AGI <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [agi] QUESTION!!



On Thu, Jan 7, 2021, 6:12 AM 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
Can modern computer vision see 1 image of ex. a cat and then if shown 10 dummy 
images - one of which does have an unseen cat - recognize which image has a cat 
- which is the cat is saw before but blurred, brighter, noisy, rotated, 
stretched, flipped, inverted brightness? This requires great accuracy at 
recognizing something it knows but that is very distorted.

No. Humans can see because of decades of training, a petabyte through our optic 
nerves. Even then we are born knowing how to recognize or learn to recognize 
things important to our survival. Things like faces and animals, vs. barcodes 
or watermarks.
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