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The Benefit of Bottlenecks in Evolving Artificial Intelligence with David Ha - #535 - Publication Date |
- Nov 11, 2021
- Episode Duration |
- 00:59:04
Today we’re joined by David Ha, a research scientist at Google.
In nature, there are many examples of “bottlenecks”, or constraints, that have shaped our development as a species. Building upon this idea, David posits that these same evolutionary bottlenecks could work when training neural network models as well. In our conversation with David, we cover a TON of ground, including the aforementioned biological inspiration for his work, then digging deeper into the different types of constraints he’s applied to ML systems. We explore abstract generative models and how advanced training agents inside of generative models has become, and quite a few papers including Neuroevolution of self-interpretable agents, World Models and Attention for Reinforcement Learning, and The Sensory Neuron as a Transformer: Permutation-Invariant Neural Networks for Reinforcement Learning.
This interview is Nerd Alert certified, so get your notes ready!
PS. David is one of our favorite follows on Twitter (@hardmaru), so check him out and share your thoughts on this interview and his work!
The complete show notes for this episode can be found at
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