When Human Intuition Meets AI
I went into the recent Future in Review (FiRe) conference worried that today's bias towards big data and data-driven decisions would further erode the role that human intuition plays in today's professional world.
It turns out the opposite may be true. Bear with me while I explain...
FiRe has a recent tradition of including CTO Design Challenges in their Deer Valley conference. They take a remarkable team of professionals (see below) and give them the duration of the three-day event to tackle a ridiculously ambitious assignment. This year, the task was to create a new way of thinking about the next generation of computing, something they called pictorial processing.
As defined by the team, pictorial processing is the architecture that will bring to light hidden information embedded in large, complex, dynamic streams of heterogeneous data.
We don't know what we don't know
Until now, computers have basically been designed to answer questions that we already know:
? How much money should we pay each employee this week?
? Which prospects are most likely to become customers this quarter?
? Where will the hurricane make landfall?
But we live in a universe filled with highly complex systems that interact with each other, and we are reaching the point where we no longer know the right questions to ask. This implies that the next generation of computers don't need to simply answer our questions, because first they need to suggest the right questions that Big Data needs to answer.
Doing this is a huge undertaking that requires a completely different approach, which is why the team set out to tackle pictorial processing.
The vision: pictorial processing ushers in a new era of proactive discovery to detect and react to economic, physical, and social change.
The name is a bit deceiving, because they are not just processing 3D pictures. Instead, they propose to process the behaviors of complex systems that may have many more dimensions than three and whose flows constantly change over time. This means huge volumes of many different types of data will be combined, and in each case the system will look for interesting differences between what is happening now and what happened in the past.
Does this sound a bit like... intuition?
Intuition is knowing something without knowing how you know it.
One way to look at the CTO Design Challenge is that they are teaching computer systems to be intuitive. As described by the team, the outputs of their proposed system would direct analysts to take a closer look at something. The system may not be able to describe exactly what is happening or why, but it will have a sense that something interesting may be happening there.
That's pretty close to intuition, even if team members might not put it that way.
To make things even more interesting, the team described numerous ways such a system might enable analysts to examine "interesting" events:
? Augmented reality
? Virtual reality
? Audio or video
? Haptic interfaces
In other words, analysis might move towards outputs that enable analysts to be far more intuitive in making judgments.
Listening to the team present their recommendations, I kept thinking that in theoretical terms this may represent the ideal balance between data-driven decisions and intuition. Such a system would be more data-driven than any in human history, but it would enable both the computer processing system and the humans to be far more intuitive in deciding what bears further investigation, and then — once again — that investigation would be data-driven to an unprecedented degree.
Earlier team member Gahl Berkooz said, "I believe that for three reasons we are at the beginning of a golden age of invention. First, we have the ability to aggregate huge amounts of data. Second, our computing capacity is growing exponentially. Third, consumer behavior is changing and people expect personalized experiences... When you take those three, there are bound to be infinite inventions coming up."
A few weeks ago, I was worried such dramatic innovation might shunt human qualities aside. Today, I am more hopeful that the opposite is going to happen. You might even say we are entering a golden age of intuition, in which human intuition no longer battles with computers for dominance, but instead works collaboratively to seek out, find, and answer the most important questions of our time.
***
The team included the following individuals, plus five others who volunteered along the way:
? Andrew Connolly, Director, DIRAC Institute, Department of Astronomy, University of Washington
? Brad Holtz, Chief Nexus Officer, Coventry Computer
? Jeff Hudson, CEO, Venafi
? Bryan William Jones, Retinal Neuroscientist and Principal Investigator/Director, Marclab for Connectomics, University of Utah
? Edy Liongosari, Chief Research Scientist and Managing Director, Accenture Labs
? Nathanael Miller, Technical Lead, Earth Energy Monitoring System (E2MS), and Aerospace Engineer, NASA Langley Research Center
? Valerio Pascucci, Endowed Chair Professor of Computing and Founding Director, CEDMAV, University of Utah
? Rob Shearer, Senior Director of Architecture, Microsoft
? Gahl Berkooz, Chief Data and Analytics Officer, Acorns
The judges were:
? Mark Anderson, Future in Review Chair and author of The Pattern Future
? Larry Smarr, Founding Director of Calit2 (a UC San Diego/UC Irvine partnership)
? Ty Carlson, Founding Member and CTO, Coventry Computer
Special thanks to Mark Anderson and to Sharon Anderson Morris, the programs director for Strategic News Service and SNS Future in Review events.
Bruce Kasanoff is a ghostwriter for thought leaders. He is the co-founder with Amy Blaschka of More Intuitive, a free community for professionals.
★ Speaker TED (over 2.6 mil views) ? author Mutuality Matters & Opportunity Makers ? Emmy winner ? Moving From Me to We
6 年Bruce as someone who has been working with several people involved in AI-related projects I recommended that they read this.... fascinating and ultimately optimistic conclusion that feels deeply satisfying, not only for us as individuals but also for the potential of deeper, more inventive collaboration and friendships. Again thank you
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7 年Bruce - I understand about half of this, but I'm using my intuition for the other 50% to gain a little clarity! What's your intuition tell you that if AI can actually exhibit "intuition"...will that ever evolve into empathy?
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7 年Love this. I have to say, you kind of answered a few concerns I have around the redundant human skill. Times have been changing behind the scenes so to speak for a long time. Its now very apparent we're becoming more digitally intelligent. As long as humans are inclusive to the change the world will hopefully be in a more positive situation. We all need the human energy to get us through things.
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7 年Tagging to circle back, read and comment. Passionate learner on EIQ and ummm, intrigued at where AI will take us. Thanks!