|
|
|
|
|
by FrustratedMonky
980 days ago
|
|
Maybe we are talking at different levels. The people theorizing that the brain is Bayesian are not saying that humans do it consciously. Like they can examine priors and making decisions. It is just that the neurons in the brain update in a way that can be modeled roughly as Bayesian. It happens without us 'deciding to do it', it is just how the brain updates to process the environment. It is happening continually, as we take in senses, and update our internal model. |
|
But if you start out with randomized priors, you will never reach 1 or 0 regardless of how much data you expose a bayesian system to. Humans, on the other hand, tend to fall into treating a probability as either 0 or 1 quite rapidly. For this step in particular, there seems to be something like rounding or L1 regularization going on.
Then, once they're stuck in 0 or 1 priors, people often revert to using evaluation similar to Bayes' Theorem again, but in that case the priors can no longer be updated (except through something like a psychological shock, hallucinogen etc).
But, as stated above, you cannot really reach such priors using Bayes' Theorem alone (if we assume the priors are not provided by genes or something that happens before the learning).