Comment author: lukeprog 13 December 2012 07:38:23AM 0 points [-]
Comment author: beriukay 13 December 2012 09:35:16AM *  3 points [-]

You make this so easy for us, luke. Explanation of 1/f noise

Comment author: Antisuji 10 December 2012 07:22:27AM 3 points [-]

I've experienced roughly the same thing. I think of it like this: when I experience an unexpectedly good outcome, I immediately feel a feeling of gratitude. Normally when this happens it is due to another person's actions (I'm given a gift or a promotion, or I'm pulled out of the way of a speeding bus, say), and as social creatures we pay attention to that and strongly associate the resultant feeling of gratitude with that person.

But it's not the person that (directly) causes the feeling, it's the circumstances. So when the feeling is caused by a good outcome that was not directly or intentionally caused by a person's actions, our brain by habit or instinct seeks out a backup candidate: God, luck, etc.

Comment author: beriukay 10 December 2012 11:35:13AM 1 point [-]

I was at a lecture by Richard Dawkins a while back, and he specifically brought up the topic of gratitude as a human parallel for (I can't remember the exact name he gave it, but wikipedia calls it Vacuum Activity). Just like a dog trying to bury a bone in the corner of the room. It also had to do with our inherent patter-matching nature, and the survival difference between making Type 1 and Type 2 mistakes (where if you falsely believe a tiger is about to pounce you, you pay a small energy cost from freaking out and running away; but if you falsely think it's just the wind, you die).

Comment author: beriukay 16 November 2012 01:16:41AM 2 points [-]

Paper 9 has just been posted.

Comment author: lukeprog 09 April 2012 10:03:58PM 0 points [-]
Comment author: beriukay 16 November 2012 01:12:22AM *  4 points [-]

Dear Paul,

I am attaching my paper on Thinking Machines. The paper was published six years before AI was born. The paper was intended for a student audience and made no attempt to be a serious treatise on thinking machines. A serious paper which I published in 1950 (attached) was entitled "An Extension of Wiener's Theory of Prediction." Please let me know if I can be of further of assistance.

With kind regards

Sincerely,

Lotfi Zadeh

Thinking Machines

Extension of Wiener's Theory

Comment author: beriukay 05 November 2012 06:24:24PM 1 point [-]

Can anybody think of a good use for being the only person in the world with Lactokinesis (Telekinesis, but only with dairy products)? I saw a TV show where a guy turned into a psychopathic murderer because nobody thought his power was cool, and since then I've spent a bit of my idle time trying to think of a way to maximize money or fame with the ability.

The problem is scalability. Even if you could do something like super-ultra pasteurize milk, or speed up milking processes, or cure lactose intolerance... you can only do it one unit at a time, and it's really domain specific. Not like Magneto.

Comment author: lukeprog 25 October 2012 10:05:19AM 0 points [-]
Comment author: beriukay 25 October 2012 12:23:29PM *  3 points [-]
Comment author: Pablo_Stafforini 09 October 2012 03:17:48PM 0 points [-]

Hey Vincent. Would you mind sending me copies of the three papers? (I assume the first two relate to the third, which I read, and liked, a long time ago. If they are unrelated, I'm not that interested.) My name is Pablo Stafforini, and my email address is FirstName@LastName.com, with the obvious substitutions. Thanks!

Comment author: beriukay 15 October 2012 02:51:27PM 1 point [-]

I was in the works of getting the Quieting of Louis Pascal chapter when this request got canceled. Here's that one, if you still want it.

Comment author: gwern 10 April 2012 03:15:11AM 0 points [-]

Somewhat to my surprise, he's apparently still alive, although I wonder whether this 91-year old has email or a copy.

Comment author: beriukay 08 October 2012 03:59:48AM 1 point [-]

He did as of 2009. I just emailed him a request.

Comment author: JJXW 20 June 2012 09:08:27PM 1 point [-]
Comment author: beriukay 08 October 2012 03:35:56AM *  3 points [-]
  1. Andrew, A.M. Learning Machines, 1959. Found here.
  2. Booth, Andrew. How Much Can Machines Learn?.
  3. There's a book at the local library, so I can get you some selected chapters.
  4. In the works.
  5. Same as #3.
  6. Same, but may be in ebook form.
  7. Also not found.
  8. Same as #3.
  9. Williams, J.D. Toward Intelligent Machines
  10. Not found.

Edited: Added #2 to list. Edited again: Added #9 to list.

Comment author: lukeprog 08 October 2012 12:25:50AM 0 points [-]
Comment author: beriukay 08 October 2012 01:58:30AM 6 points [-]

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