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by lvass 1340 days ago
A related question: can I indefinitely test they're performing their task correctly? When operating these neurons for actual tasks, real time challenge-response-like testing is probably a good idea. But if they can learn, eventually they may be able to trick the tests. How would one design automated tests to evaluate the state of learning-capable systems?
4 comments

>How would one design automated tests to evaluate the state of learning-capable systems?

A question many call center managers ask themselves.

The nightmare of AI is it's a black box. The nightmare of people is that they're people. (or, per Sartre, "hell is other people" ... but that's such a freighted human perspective).

Gee if only we could grow meat to eat in a lab and grow brains on substrate to answer phone calls and generate images, we could do away with the complexity of other humans we might have to interact with. Except... you have even less understanding of what motivates that clump of cells than you do what motivates your office secretary.

Don't get me wrong, it's a super cool idea. I'm just not sure exactly when bioethics went completely out the window.

Welcome to the field of QA automation
What's more, you can apply evolution to your Petri dish.