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    Home»AI»Understanding Computational Processes in Everyday Life
    Understanding Computational Processes in Everyday Life
    AI

    Understanding Computational Processes in Everyday Life

    By TZBJuly 14, 20247 Mins Read
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    ###⁢ The Ubiquity of⁤ Computation: Seeing the World ⁤Through a ‍Computational Lens

    #### Introduction

    The original ‌version of this story appeared in Quanta Magazine.

    In the movie ⁤*Oppenheimer*, Niels Bohr challenges‌ the ​physicist early‍ in ‍his⁤ career:

    Bohr: Algebra is like sheet music. The important thing isn’t “can you⁣ read ⁤music?” It’s “can you hear it?” Can you hear the music, Robert?

    Oppenheimer: Yes, I can.

    I can’t hear the algebra, but I ‌feel the machine.

    #### Early Encounters with Computation

    I felt the machine even before I⁢ touched a ⁣computer. In the ⁢1970s, I eagerly awaited my first computer, a Radio ‌Shack‍ TRS-80. I wrote simple programs on paper​ and⁤ could feel the machine processing each step. When⁢ I finally typed in the program, the⁢ output ⁤felt almost ‍anticlimactic compared to the imagined process.

    Even today, ⁣I don’t visualize ⁢or hear the machine, but it sings to me; I feel it humming along, updating⁣ variables, looping, branching, searching,⁤ until it arrives at its destination and provides an answer. To me, a program isn’t static code; ⁢it’s the embodiment of a living creature that‍ follows my‍ instructions to a (hopefully) successful conclusion. I know computers don’t physically work this way, ‍but that⁢ doesn’t‍ stop my metaphorical machine.

    #### ​Computation in Everyday Life

    Once‌ you start thinking about computation, you ‍start to see ⁤it ⁣everywhere. Take mailing a letter through ⁣the postal service. ⁣Put the​ letter in an envelope with an address and ⁤a⁤ stamp on ⁣it, and stick ⁤it in a mailbox, and somehow it will end⁤ up in the recipient’s​ mailbox. That​ is a computational process—a series of‌ operations that move the letter⁤ from one place to another until it ‍reaches its final destination. This ⁤routing process is not unlike what happens with electronic ⁤mail or any other piece⁣ of data sent ‍through the internet.⁣ Seeing the world‌ in this way may seem ‍odd,⁤ but as Friedrich Nietzsche is reputed to‍ have said:

    “Those who were seen dancing were⁣ thought to be insane by those who could not⁤ hear the music.”

    #### Understanding Randomness

    This innate sense of a machine at⁢ work can lend a computational perspective to almost any phenomenon, even⁤ one as ⁣seemingly​ inscrutable as the concept of‌ randomness. Something seemingly random, like a coin flip, can be fully described by some ‌complex computational process that yields an unpredictable outcome of ⁣heads or⁢ tails. The outcome depends on ⁣myriad variables: the ⁣force⁣ and angle and⁢ height of the flip; the weight, diameter, thickness, ⁤and distribution of mass of the coin; air resistance; gravity; the hardness of the landing surface; and ‍so on. It’s similar for shuffling a deck of cards, rolling dice, or ⁣spinning ⁤a roulette wheel—or generating “random” numbers on a computer,⁤ which just involves running some purposely complicated function. None of these is a​ truly random process.

    #### Laplace’s Demon

    The idea goes back centuries. In 1814, in his *Philosophical⁣ Essay on Probabilities*, Pierre-Simon Laplace first‌ described an intelligence, now known as Laplace’s demon, that could predict these outcomes:

    We ought to regard the present state of the universe as the effect of⁣ its antecedent state ⁢and as the⁢ cause of the state that is to follow. An intelligence knowing all the forces acting ‍in nature at a given instant, as well as⁢ the⁢ momentary positions of all things⁣ in the⁢ universe, would be able to comprehend in​ one single formula the motions of the largest bodies as well as the lightest atoms in the world, provided that its intellect were sufficiently powerful.

    The reverse implication is that for someone without a vast​ enough intellect, processes such as a coin flip would appear⁣ random. The⁤ language of computation lets us formalize this connection.

    #### Advances in Artificial​ Intelligence

    Earlier this year, Avi Wigderson received the Turing⁢ award,⁣ the “Nobel Prize of computing,” partly ⁤for formally connecting​ randomness with mathematical ​functions ‍that are⁢ hard to compute. ​He and his colleagues⁣ created a⁣ process that takes‍ a suitably complex function‌ and outputs ⁤“pseudorandom” bits that⁣ can’t be efficiently distinguished from truly random bits. Randomness, it seems, is‍ just ⁤computation we cannot predict.

    #### Machine Learning and Language

    Do we have⁢ a way to manage this randomness and‌ complexity? The recent progress we have seen in artificial intelligence through machine learning gives us a glimpse into what it would ‌mean to do just that. Information can be ⁢split ⁣into a structured part and a random ⁣part. Take English for example. There is an⁣ underlying complex structure‌ that describes the language, and the sentences that society has produced over time are, in effect, a random sampling from that structure. Recent advances in machine learning ‍have allowed us to take these random samples and recover much of the underlying structure underneath. Often that structure appears opaque, but we can still use it to simulate the random ⁢samples, generating new English sentences on demand.

    #### The Process of Translation

    Consider the problem of translation.⁣ Imagine a woman, Sophie, who grew up​ speaking English and French and now works as a⁤ translator. She can easily ‌take an⁢ English text, fully understand it, and produce the equivalent in French. Computationally speaking, the machine in this case is Sophie’s brain, as⁤ it must follow some process that converts English into French. ​Sophie likely doesn’t​ understand the entire process, or even ⁣think ‍of it⁤ as ⁤a process, but it’s happening nevertheless.

    Suppose now we want to ​translate text on a computer. Simply‌ using a French-English dictionary to translate word​ by word doesn’t work, as different languages‍ have different structures, and words have different meanings in different contexts. Applying linguistic tools only goes so far; the computational process of understanding language goes beyond what we can describe.

    Sophie ⁤understands the languages because she ⁢grew up in ⁣a bilingual household, being​ exposed to both languages⁤ and all their complexities. Machine learning takes a similar approach, training language models on large amounts of data. These ⁢models consist of ‍a‍ complex neural net, a collection of‍ artificial neurons cleverly connected to each other, and ​these connections have associated weights, which alter the signals moving ⁣through the system. When properly trained, the ⁤neural ‍net will predict the probability of the next​ word‍ in a sequence⁤ being translated from English to French.

    While we typically cannot ‍understand the underlying process of a trained neural net any more than Sophie understands her complete translation process, we can easily simulate that process to get the probability of the next word. ‍If⁤ the neural net is trained perfectly, ⁢it will be impossible to distinguish the probability of the next ‌word ⁣it predicts from the probability of what Sophie would say. Just as Wigderson connected complexity functions and pseudorandomness, predicting the probabilities of the next ‍word lets us capture the complex⁣ calculations behind it.

    #### The Future of Machine Learning

    English⁤ and French are ​themselves “random” samples from a concept known as human language, and the newest tools ‍have discovered enough‍ of this underlying structure to allow reasonable translation even⁢ between relatively obscure languages.

    The learning algorithms themselves are processes, and I feel the weights updating as we feed in ‍more and more examples to train the models. The⁤ advances we have seen in ‍machine learning over the past decades have helped us accomplish complex processes, from human ones like translation, vision, art and conversation, to biological ones like protein folding.

    Machine‍ learning models are still prone‌ to mistakes and misinformation, and they ⁣still have trouble with‍ basic reasoning tasks.​ Nevertheless, we’ve entered​ an⁤ era‍ where we‌ can use computation itself to help us manage the randomness that ⁤arises from complex systems.

    #### Conclusion

    I’ve been very lucky. I could build a research career around the machines ⁣that encompass the way I feel ⁣the world. I have found ⁢my calling—or,⁣ more precisely, it⁤ has ⁢found me. Whether you hear the music, the algebra, computation, biology, magic, art, or some other way of ‍understanding ⁣the world, listen​ to​ it. Who knows what ⁢secrets you may learn?

    Original story reprinted with permission from Quanta ​Magazine, an editorially independent publication ⁢of the Simons Foundation whose mission is to enhance public understanding of science by covering research developments and trends in mathematics and​ the ‍physical and life sciences.

    Magazine Niels Bohr Oppenheimer Quanta TRS-80
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    View 4 Comments

    4 Comments

    1. Cameron O. Parker on July 14, 2024 5:37 am

      Who knew your morning coffee could be explained by an algorithm!

      Reply
    2. sapphireg on July 14, 2024 5:37 am

      Ever considered that your laundry schedule is just a complex set of computational rules?

      Reply
    3. Ava Rodriguez on July 14, 2024 5:37 am

      The cashier’s efficiency at your local supermarket is actually a computational marvel in disguise!

      Reply
    4. sapphireb on July 14, 2024 5:37 am

      Cameron O. Parker: Who knew your morning coffee could be explained by an algorithm!

      Reply
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