Human imagination in no Jeopardy from Watson

Image: Geoff Oliver Bugbee

Following a discussion about why the natural language abilities of Watson are such a breakthrough in artificial intelligence, IBM's David Shepler later had two teams of local high school students square off against it in a game of Jeopardy!

Shepler's background is not in computer science, but in public policy, and he talked following the contest about the need for broad thinking - thinking across multiple disciplines - in order to bring breakthroughs like Watson to the public.

Watson's future may be in the field of education, where it might, incidentally, learn from curious young minds, Shepler said. But one of its more immediate uses may be in augmenting the judgment of medical professionals, who must consume enormous amounts of information to be proficient, and who might, by combining the deep analytics supplied by Watson with the visual clues from the patient right in front of them, make truly inspired diagnoses.

Wayne

Where to find us online during IdeaFestival 2011

Image: Geoff Oliver Bugbee

Here are a few of the digital locations you may find us during IdeaFestival 2011. There are still some Tickets available, but if you can't make it watch the IdeaFestival on FORA.tv!

Point your iPhone or Android to http://ideafestival.com for a prettified version of the web site, including thumbnails of the 2011 program and all the presenters.

Check out the IF bog on the IdeaFestival web site for images and live-blogged accounts of some presentations, or take the syndicated feed to read content wherever you may be.

To receive occasional texts from the IdeaFestival about news and events on site, text "IF11" (without quotes) to 25827. To opt out, text "Stop IF11" to 25827.

Contribute your pictures to the open Flickr pool for IdeaFestival 2011. If you were monitoring the pool last year, you would have seen the picture above taken by Geoff Bugbee. The festival images are always incredible!

Our Twitter handle is @ideafestival - please append you tweets with the hash #IF11 to have your tweet included in the Twitterfall in the Kentucky Center lobby - or find us on Facebook.

I hope to see you in the cloud!

Wayne

The Randomness of Concentration Camps

While Leonard Mlodinow is known for his contributions to physics, in this video he shares a story about his father, a Holocaust survivor, pausing on a couple of occasions to collect himself.

It will put a lump in your throat as well.

Leonard Mlodinow will be speaking at IdeaFestival 2011 next week on the subject of probability and chance, which makes complete sense, right?

I wonder what other IdeaFestival presenters would say if they were asked to share in ten minutes a meaningful or inspiring story from their lives. Having been thus informed, I bet their science, their art, their life's work would be that much more accessible, and not just because they had somehow managed to add new detail, or used just the right words. I bet their science, their art, their life's work would be that much more accessible because, thus cued, we had picked out the details, we had listened to the words and we had imagined. We live in story.

Wayne

Something more beautiful than a ready-made world

In its insistence on the limits of knowing in a modern world, obliquity, a term coined by John Kay, reads like a modern day fable.

Obliquity is equally relevant to our businesses and our bodies, to the management of our lives and our national economies. We do not maximise shareholder value or the length of our lives, our happiness or the gross national product, for the simple but fundamental reason that we do not know how to and never will. No one will ever be buried with the epitaph 'He maximised shareholder value'. Not just because it is a less than inspiring objective, but because even with hindsight there is no way of recognising whether the objective has been achieved.

This is a fundamentally skeptical view about what we can know with certainty about complex systems, but I think the key word here is certainty. Whether we are dealing with societies, economies or the motes in quantum fields, the best we can do is to approximate or model the whole, to live in concert, to react and adjust.

I find this very satisfying. How many times, for example, have you taken a personal risk only to be rewarded with a pleasant and unexpected outcome, or looked back with satisfaction at the twist and turns your life has taken? You got the girl - or the job - or the happy prognosis. To become experts in our lives, we must take risks, and speaking only for myself, we could do with a little, no, make that a lot, less certainty from many quarters.

At the 2008 IdeaFestival, and in the midst of a one of the most gut wrenching market sell-offs in history, Nassim Nicholas Taleb pointedly skewered forecasters and market analysts for their failure to predict what was happening on Wall Street, memorably saying that for "every Turkey, Thanksgiving is a Black Swan." The turkeys in question weren't birds. That was about the nicest thing he said that day.

At IdeaFestival 2011 - it all goes down next week! - you can hear from Leonard Mlodinow on the role of probability and chance in our everyday lives, watch comic Steve Mazan live his dream in the Oscar nominated film "Dying to Do Letterman," wrap your mind around the preposterous idea, suggested by Suketu Bhavsar, that we may live in a multi-verse, and see - or not - Daniel Simons' gorillas. Our minds are wonderfully oblique and prone to unexpected connections, built to take in the the sum of experience and make mid-course corrections or to extend a helping hand, even when none may be merited. Isn't that good news? Yes, in the staggering variety of people and ideas that it brings to you, the IdeaFestival won't give you the answer, but something rather more beautiful than a ready-made world. I hope to see you next week.

Wayne