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Author: AJMaren

Statistical Mechanics, the Future of AI, and Personal Stories

Statistical Mechanics, the Future of AI, and Personal Stories

Statistical Mechanics and Personal Stories (On the Same Page!)   Yikes! It’s Thursday morning already. I haven’t written to you for three weeks. That’s long enough that I have to pause and search my memory for my username to get into the website. Thanksgiving was lovely. The Thursday after that was grading, all day – and for several days before and after. By now, I (and most of you) have had a few days of recovery, from what has been…

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Third Stage Boost – Part 2: Implications of Neuromorphic Computing

Third Stage Boost – Part 2: Implications of Neuromorphic Computing

Neuromorphic Computing: Statistical Mechanics & Criticality   Last week, I suggested that we were on the verge of something new, and referenced an article by von Bubnoff: A brain built from atomic switches [that] can learn, together with the follow-on article Brain Built on Switches. The key innovation described in this article was a silver mesh, as shown in the following figure. This mesh is a “network of microscopically thin intersecting silver wires,” grown via a combination of electrochemical and…

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Third Stage Boost: Statistical Mechanics and Neuromorphic Computing – Part 1

Third Stage Boost: Statistical Mechanics and Neuromorphic Computing – Part 1

Next-Generation Neural Network Architectures: More Brain-Like   Three generations of artificial intelligence.. The third generation is emerging … right about … now. That’s what is shown in this figure, presented in log-time scale. Brief history of AI in log-time scale The first generation of AI, symbolic AI, began conceptually around 1954, and lasted until 1986; 32 years. On the log-time scale shown in the figure above, this entire era takes place under the first curve; the black bell-shaped curve on…

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Machine Learning: Multistage Boost Process

Machine Learning: Multistage Boost Process

Three Stages to Orbital Altitude in Machine Learning Several years ago, Regina Dugan (then Director of DARPA) gave a talk in which she showed a clip of epic NASA launch fails. Not just one, but many fails. The theme was that we had to risk failure in order to succeed with innovation. This YouTube vid of rocket launch failures isn’t the exact clip that she showed (the “action” doesn’t kick in for about a minute), but it’s pretty close. For…

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Neg-Log-Sum-Exponent-Neg-Energy – That’s the Easy Part!

Neg-Log-Sum-Exponent-Neg-Energy – That’s the Easy Part!

The Surprising (Hidden) “Gotcha” in This Energy Equation: A couple of days ago, I was doing one of my regular weekly online “Synch” sessions with my Deep Learning students. In a sort of “Beware, here there be dragons!” moment, I showed them this energy equation from the Hinton et al. (2012) Nature review paper on acoustic speech modeling: One of my students pointed out, “That equation looks kind of simple.” Well, he’s right. And I kind of bungled the answer,…

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Neural Network Architectures: Determining the Number of Hidden Nodes

Neural Network Architectures: Determining the Number of Hidden Nodes

Figuring Out the Number of Hidden Nodes: Then and Now   One of the most demanding questions in developing neural networks (of any size or complexity) is determining the architecture: number of layers, nodes-per-layer, and other factors. This was an important question in the late 1980’s and early 1990’s, when neural networks first emerged. Deciding on the network architecture details is even more challenging today. In this post, we’re going to look at some strategies for deciding on the number…

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Future Forecasts: How We’ll Mind-Control Ourselves

Future Forecasts: How We’ll Mind-Control Ourselves

Tweaking Our Own Mental State: Getting Easier All the Time   This last spring, twelve minutes changed my life forever. I got into a heck of a fistfight. I went into a dark cave, and put on an alternate identity and transformed into the baddest-a** thing around. I had one of the most spiritual, exalted, uplifting experiences that I’ve ever had. And I fell in love. So here’s the story. I was at the NVIDIA GTC (GPU Technology Conference) this…

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Selecting a Neural Network Transfer Function: Classic vs. Current

Selecting a Neural Network Transfer Function: Classic vs. Current

Neural Network Transfer Functions: Sigmoid, Tanh, and ReLU   Making it or breaking it with neural networks: how to make smart choices.     Why We Weren’t Getting Convergence   This last week, in working with a very simple and straightforward XOR neural network, a lot of my students were having convergence problems. The most likely reason? Very likely, it’s been my choice for the transfer function. I had given them a very simple network. (Lots of them are still…

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Backpropagation: Not Dead, Not Yet

Backpropagation: Not Dead, Not Yet

Backpropagation: Why It Still Matters   Thirty years ago, at the dawn of the neural networks era, backpropagation was all the rage. In the minds of most people, it was infinitely preferable to the simulated annealing algorithm that Hinton et al. had proposed for their Boltzmann machine. Now, it seems as though the see-saw of algorithm popularity has shifted; we’re focused on energy-based methods. We might be asking: is backpropagation old hat? Good question! Even more than that, someone coming…

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Notational Frenzy

Notational Frenzy

When the Subtle Art of Mathematical Notation Defeats You (and How to Fight Back)   A couple of years ago, I was teaching Time Series and Forecasting for the first time. I didn’t know the subject – at all – but that didn’t bother me. Hey, it was mathematics, right? Anything that’s mathematical, I can eat for lunch, and then want some dessert-equations afterwards. First week, introducing the subject. That went fine. Second week, Simple Exponential Smoothing (SES). That’s simple….

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