From paper:
The recent defining moment in computer vision is the smashing victory by Geoff Hinton and his team on the ImageNet Large Scale Visual Recognition Challenge last October.
Geoff Hinton is a giant, it's incredible that he is so productive at a late stage in his career. Everyone who is interested in machine learning should read all his big papers. Unfortunately you have to piece together the elements of his big picture ideas by connecting the dots between several papers; he should really have a book out that summarizes his vision.
Today MIRI released a new technical report by visiting researcher Katja Grace called "Algorithmic Progress in Six Domains." The report summarizes data on algorithmic progress – that is, better performance per fixed amount of computing hardware – in six domains:
MIRI's purpose for collecting these data was to shed light on the question of intelligence explosion microeconomics, though we suspect the report will be of broad interest within the software industry and computer science academia.
One finding from the report was previously discussed by Robin Hanson here. (Robin saw an early draft on the intelligence explosion microeconomics mailing list.)
This is the preferred page for discussing the report in general.
Summary: