NCSTAT-MECHAICLJun 20, 2023

Eight challenges in developing theory of intelligence

arXiv:2306.11232v212 citationsh-index: 12
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

It addresses foundational problems in understanding intelligence for researchers in AI and neuroscience, but is incremental as it builds on existing theoretical paradigms.

The paper identifies eight key challenges in developing a theory of intelligence, focusing on representation learning, generalization, adversarial robustness, continual learning, causal learning, internal brain models, next-token prediction, and subjective experience, without presenting specific results or numbers.

A good theory of mathematical beauty is more practical than any current observation, as new predictions of physical reality can be verified self-consistently. This belief applies to the current status of understanding deep neural networks including large language models and even the biological intelligence. Toy models provide a metaphor of physical reality, allowing mathematically formulating that reality (i.e., the so-called theory), which can be updated as more conjectures are justified or refuted. One does not need to pack all details into a model, but rather, more abstract models are constructed, as complex systems like brains or deep networks have many sloppy dimensions but much less stiff dimensions that strongly impact macroscopic observables. This kind of bottom-up mechanistic modeling is still promising in the modern era of understanding the natural or artificial intelligence. Here, we shed light on eight challenges in developing theory of intelligence following this theoretical paradigm. Theses challenges are representation learning, generalization, adversarial robustness, continual learning, causal learning, internal model of the brain, next-token prediction, and finally the mechanics of subjective experience.

Foundations

The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

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