Re: [agi] Colin Hales mention in Salon editorial

2021-05-11 Thread immortal . discoveries
We may not be understanding, so, it would be justicful that you make a new thread and explain in under 100 words the whole thing in clear relatable words. I can do that easy. Many others and I don't connect to your path or forgot what you said, so it is better you make a small clear separate thr

Re: [agi] Colin Hales mention in Salon editorial

2021-05-11 Thread Colin Hales
Matt, The EM fields are not noise. They are chaotic, complex and deeply entwined in function. Indeed central to function. I have theory. I have a hypothesis. I am doing the experiments. I have a concept design for the chip. The central device device is on the floor next to me and testing is in play

Re: [agi] Colin Hales mention in Salon editorial

2021-05-11 Thread immortal . discoveries
In the end, patterns are the most of AI. And if you use random, you must know why too. -- Artificial General Intelligence List: AGI Permalink: https://agi.topicbox.com/groups/agi/T7c7052974ce450f1-M4c70efefa286bb98dc9bc3a9 Delivery options: https://agi.topi

Re: [agi] Colin Hales mention in Salon editorial

2021-05-11 Thread immortal . discoveries
We can only use patterns to build something useful at later timesDALL-E can answer trillions of inputs accuratelyhammers can solve hundreds of problems, ones that reoccur too Even acting random so a sniper can't target you easily is a pattern...disallowing his patterns to exist or k

Re: [agi] Colin Hales mention in Salon editorial

2021-05-11 Thread Mike Archbold
On 5/11/21, Matt Mahoney wrote: > Maybe electromagnetic noise from neurons is significant. So what? Matt: Look at your sentence: "maybe electromagnetic noise is significant." That's why we are talking about it. If it is part of the overall *structure* of the brain, thus then the mind, we need t

Re: [agi] Re: AGI Discussion Forum, May 14: Minecraft for aGI?

2021-05-11 Thread immortal . discoveries
Same for Sid Meire's evolution revolution game, why does it seem so diverse yet the AI is probably not a neural network!! Lol? Should look into this maybe. And yes it isn't unbeatable, but it's human level still. -- Artificial General Intelligence List:

Re: [agi] Re: AGI Discussion Forum, May 14: Minecraft for aGI?

2021-05-11 Thread immortal . discoveries
Why not Ninja Gaiden Black, on Master Ninja mode difficulty? Nearly the hardest and most beautiful game ever. If an AI can actually play through that game and decide what sword to upgrade and so on, that'd be pretty good, no? Give it the full game. I'm still unsure why the AI on Command and Con

Re: [agi] Colin Hales mention in Salon editorial

2021-05-11 Thread Matt Mahoney
Maybe electromagnetic noise from neurons is significant. So what? If noise causes nearby neurons to fire, we can still model the effect using synaptic weights. Normal training will compensate for the effect. I don't know what Colin expects to find from his Xchip when he doesn't even know what it w

Re: [agi] Colin Hales mention in Salon editorial

2021-05-11 Thread Dorian Aur
"The first step is to shape/reshape the electromagnetic field and its interaction within a biological structure, see the general hybrid model https://arxiv.org/ftp/arxiv/papers/1411/1411.5224.pdf *That was a very pleasurable read, my qualia’s gettin all jazzed up on that one...*" Another advanta

Re: [agi] Re: AGI Discussion Forum, May 14: Minecraft for aGI?

2021-05-11 Thread doddy
why not no mans sky or planet explorer? why minecraft? On Mon, May 10, 2021 at 3:00 AM Ben Goertzel wrote: > Ah, forgot to re-include the general AGI Discussion Forum link, > > https://wiki.opencog.org/w/AGI_Discussion_Forum > > > On Mon, May 10, 2021 at 12:51 AM Ben Goertzel wrote: > > > > Hi

Re: [agi] Re: BIT predictor

2021-05-11 Thread Matt Mahoney
Mostly for PAQ/ZPAQ the contexts start on byte or word boundaries and end at the current bit. As an optimization I use a hash table to index contexts that end every 3 (PAQ) or 4 (ZPAQ) bits that map to an array of 7 or 15 bit histories (1 byte each). The bits after the nibble boundary select the hi

[agi] Re: BIT predictor

2021-05-11 Thread immortal . discoveries
@Matt oh maybe I got it, is this way a good idea?: Say I search for these contexts: "walking dow[n[ [t[h[e] ?" When I get matches, there is byte sized predictions, simply I gather all the first bits. Then upon predicting the next bit, I remove the bytes (predictions) that don't start with t

Re: [agi] Colin Hales mention in Salon editorial

2021-05-11 Thread immortal . discoveries
One way would be wrong, other is the better way. This is made obvious above. Don't say vacation. -- Artificial General Intelligence List: AGI Permalink: https://agi.topicbox.com/groups/agi/T7c7052974ce450f1-M9161a89f9387cfdc5f9c577b Delivery options: https:

Re: [agi] Colin Hales mention in Salon editorial

2021-05-11 Thread immortal . discoveries
It's up to you what you do when see cat, do you predict the most common next thing, or say LETS GO ON A VACATION, oddly, outloud. You could also look at cat as 'at' or 'ca' or c_t' and combine predictions from them all. -- Artificial General Intelligence Li

Re: [agi] Colin Hales mention in Salon editorial

2021-05-11 Thread John Rose
On Monday, May 10, 2021, at 11:13 PM, immortal.discoveries wrote: > And yeah, that's all a brain can do is predict, only patterns exist in data. Some patterns exist in the data and some exist in the perceiver like those patterns where one brain perceives one image and another brain perceives an

Re: [agi] Colin Hales mention in Salon editorial

2021-05-11 Thread John Rose
On Monday, May 10, 2021, at 10:48 PM, Mike Archbold wrote: > Plainly a lot happens at the cell level with electric field action. Ions are moving around, eg into cells, subject to electric fields. What happens at a macro brain level or the middle stages with EMF? Why is there a presumption that such