IBM's Watson - Aid or Threat?
Posted: Sat Feb 19, 2011 12:34 am
We all may have read about IBM's Watson winning the Jeopardy.
Ken Jenning's wonderful article on the experience, titled "My Puny Human Brain" here -> http://www.slate.com/id/2284721/
Reading IBM's version, they indicate that they modeled the computer to think like Ken. Ken's article confirms this by his impression that the computer thought (more like processed information and decisions) like him. Never knew that they were fighting each other to find the "double jeopardy". I always thought that it was random. Never knew that it was possible to narrow it down to certain positions. Both with Ken, and with the researchers at the Medical facility in Maryland where they are collaborating on applications, they refer to this computer as a person. (While watching Jeopardy, both me and my kid were referring to the computer as a person).
From IBM
[quote]Watson, named after IBM founder Thomas J. Watson, was built by a team of IBM scientists who set out to accomplish a grand challenge ? build a computing system that rivals a human?s ability to answer questions posed in natural language with speed, accuracy and confidence. The Jeopardy! format provides the ultimate challenge because the game?s clues involve analyzing subtle meaning, irony, riddles, and other language complexities in which humans excel and computers traditionally do not.
Beyond Jeopardy!, the technology behind Watson can be adapted to solve problems and drive progress in various fields. The computer has the ability to sift through vast amounts of data and return precise answers, ranking its confidence in its answers. The technology could be applied in areas such as healthcare, to help accurately diagnose patients, to improve online self-service help desks, to provide tourists and citizens with specific information regarding cities, prompt customer support via phone, and much more.[/quote]
Are we looking at a future where this technology is more an aid for reducing error rates in information processing (by the human brains) or a threat to certain jobs that are currently not efficiently handled by humans (I am sure we all have experienced call center support that was more wasteful than useful in problem resolution)?
What differentiates good physicians from the bad ones? Is one key differentiator, their ability to diagnose with little or no error? Will the physicians of the future be mere data collection agents (collect data, per the instructions from the computer, and feed the data into the computer to derive a set of diagnosis)?
Ken Jenning's wonderful article on the experience, titled "My Puny Human Brain" here -> http://www.slate.com/id/2284721/
Reading IBM's version, they indicate that they modeled the computer to think like Ken. Ken's article confirms this by his impression that the computer thought (more like processed information and decisions) like him. Never knew that they were fighting each other to find the "double jeopardy". I always thought that it was random. Never knew that it was possible to narrow it down to certain positions. Both with Ken, and with the researchers at the Medical facility in Maryland where they are collaborating on applications, they refer to this computer as a person. (While watching Jeopardy, both me and my kid were referring to the computer as a person).
From IBM
[quote]Watson, named after IBM founder Thomas J. Watson, was built by a team of IBM scientists who set out to accomplish a grand challenge ? build a computing system that rivals a human?s ability to answer questions posed in natural language with speed, accuracy and confidence. The Jeopardy! format provides the ultimate challenge because the game?s clues involve analyzing subtle meaning, irony, riddles, and other language complexities in which humans excel and computers traditionally do not.
Beyond Jeopardy!, the technology behind Watson can be adapted to solve problems and drive progress in various fields. The computer has the ability to sift through vast amounts of data and return precise answers, ranking its confidence in its answers. The technology could be applied in areas such as healthcare, to help accurately diagnose patients, to improve online self-service help desks, to provide tourists and citizens with specific information regarding cities, prompt customer support via phone, and much more.[/quote]
Are we looking at a future where this technology is more an aid for reducing error rates in information processing (by the human brains) or a threat to certain jobs that are currently not efficiently handled by humans (I am sure we all have experienced call center support that was more wasteful than useful in problem resolution)?
What differentiates good physicians from the bad ones? Is one key differentiator, their ability to diagnose with little or no error? Will the physicians of the future be mere data collection agents (collect data, per the instructions from the computer, and feed the data into the computer to derive a set of diagnosis)?