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by ComputerGuru
1038 days ago
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That’s not exactly true, there doesn’t seem to be an upper bound (that we can reach) on storage capacity in the brain [0]. Instead, the brain actually works to actively distill knowledge that doesn’t need to be memorized verbatim into its essential components in order to achieve exactly this “generalized intuition and understanding” to avoid overfitting. [0]: https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/new-estimate-boos... |
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...but that's exactly what OP said, no?
I remember attending an ML presentation where the speaker shared a quote I can't find anymore (speaking of memory and generalization :)), which said something like: "To learn is to forget"
If we memorized everything perfectly, we would not learn anything: instead of remembering the concept of a "chair", you would remember thousands of separate instances of things you've seen that have a certain combination of colors and shapes etc
It's the fact that we forget certain details (small differences between all these chairs) that makes us learn what a "chair" is.
Likewise, if you remembered every single word in a book, you would not understand its meaning; understanding its meaning = being able to "summarize" (compress) this long list of words into something more essential: storyline, characters, feelings, etc.