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DeepMind: Why is AI so good at language? It's something in language itself
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简介Can the frequency of language, and qualities such as polysemy, affect whether a neural network can s...
Can the frequency of language, and qualities such as polysemy, affect whether a neural network can suddenly solve tasks for which it was not specifically developed, known as "few-shot learning"? DeepMind says yes.
Tiernan Ray for ZDNetHow is it that a program such as OpenAI's GPT-3 neural network can answer multiple choice questions, or write a poem in a particular style, despite never being programmed for those specific tasks?
It may be because human language has statistical properties that lead a neural network to expect the unexpected, according to new research by DeepMind, the AI unit of Google.
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Natural language, when viewed from the point of view of statistics, has qualities that are "non-uniform," such as words that can stand for multiple things, known as "polysemy," like the word "bank," meaning a place where you put money or a rising mound of earth. And words that sound the same can stand for different things, known as homonyms, like "here" and "hear."
Those qualities of language are the focus of a paper posted on arXiv this month, "Data Distributional Properties Drive Emergent Few-Shot Learning in Transformers," by DeepMind scientists Stephanie C.Y. Chan, Adam Santoro, Andrew K. Lampinen, Jane X. Wang, Aaditya Singh, Pierre H. Richemond, Jay McClelland, and Felix Hill.
Also: What is GPT-3? Everything you need to know about OpenAI's breakthrough AI language program
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