Kathleen Martin

Well-known member
Mar 16, 2020
4,267
1,533
Lexington, Kentucky
The context: Studies show that when people and AI systems work together, they can outperform either one acting alone. Medical diagnostic systems are often checked over by human doctors, and content moderation systems filter what they can before requiring human assistance. But algorithms are rarely designed to optimize for this AI-to-human handover. If they were, the AI system would only defer to its human counterpart if the person could actually make a better decision.
The research: Researchers at MIT’s Computer Science and AI Laboratory (CSAIL) have now developed an AI system to do this kind of optimization based on strengths and weaknesses of the human collaborator. It uses two separate machine-learning models; one makes the actual decision, whether that’s diagnosing a patient or removing a social media post, and one predicts whether the AI or human is the better decision maker.
https://www.technologyreview.com/2020/08/05/1006003/ai-machine-learning-defer-to-human-expert/
 

Attachments

  • p0000310.m00198.ap_18181381743658_e1596578016426.jpg
    p0000310.m00198.ap_18181381743658_e1596578016426.jpg
    127.3 KB · Views: 0