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AI Government United States Technology

DARPA Wants To Build an AI To Find the Patterns Hidden in Global Chaos (techcrunch.com) 71

A new program at DARPA is aimed at creating a machine learning system that can sift through the innumerable events and pieces of media generated every day and identify any threads of connection or narrative in them. It's called KAIROS: Knowledge-directed Artificial Intelligence Reasoning Over Schemas. From a report: "Schema" in this case has a very specific meaning. It's the idea of a basic process humans use to understand the world around them by creating little stories of interlinked events. For instance when you buy something at a store, you know that you generally walk into the store, select an item, bring it to the cashier, who scans it, then you pay in some way, and then leave the store. This "buying something" process is a schema we all recognize, and could of course have schemas within it (selecting a product; payment process) or be part of another schema (gift giving; home cooking).

Although these are easily imagined inside our heads, they're surprisingly difficult to define formally in such a way that a computer system would be able to understand. They're familiar to us from long use and understanding, but they're not immediately obvious or rule-bound, like how an apple will fall downwards from a tree at a constant acceleration. And the more data there are, the more difficult it is to define. Buying something is comparatively simple, but how do you create a schema for recognizing a cold war, or a bear market? That's what DARPA wants to look into.

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DARPA Wants To Build an AI To Find the Patterns Hidden in Global Chaos

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  • by xxxJonBoyxxx ( 565205 ) on Tuesday January 08, 2019 @06:59PM (#57927570)
    >> a machine learning system that can sift through the innumerable events and pieces of media generated every day and identify any threads of connection or narrative in them.

    This sound like a marketing question. As in, "how well are the talking points from various agencies and political groups represented in the media." There are communications firms that perform this type of analysis today on the messages they try to get out into the public (e.g., "this statistic we created - that's just a little bit off the official one so we can track it - has been republished in 228 news stories in the past 6 months").
    • by Anonymous Coward

      >> a machine learning system that can sift through the innumerable events and pieces of media generated every day and identify any threads of connection or narrative in them.

      This sound like a marketing question.

      No. It sounds like a machine for inventing conspiracy theories.

      • It sounds like automating both pareidolia and apophenia. And then taking the conclusions of both seriously because "numbers don't lie".

  • So watching Fox News (or MSNBC, etc) is going to answer this perennial college sophomore question? Couldn't we just watch Three Days of The Condor instead?
  • Mr KAIROS doesn't have the same ring to it.

  • Just ask Harold from Person of Interest, he'll do it for just one dollar but there is a catch. ;)

  • Fredrick Brooks was absolutely correct. There is no silver bullet in programming.

    I think the problem described above "buy something" has an analog in the Object Oriented programming mind set, where the process of buying something can be defined in more and more detail... So you abstract "Buy something".... "In a store" or "online"... "Using a credit card"..... Just like we abstracted "Vehicle" which is "A Car" has "an engine" and the like.

    Brooks was right, programming takes effort and AI isn't the answ

  • They're either buying into the same marketing and media hype for the half-assed excuse for AI everyone keeps trotting out, or they've got something nobody else has, meaning general AI. The latter is highly unlikely, if they did we wouldn't be hearing about it at all.
    • by Wycliffe ( 116160 ) on Tuesday January 08, 2019 @07:41PM (#57927838) Homepage

      They're either buying into the same marketing and media hype for the half-assed excuse for AI everyone keeps trotting out, or they've got something nobody else has, meaning general AI. The latter is highly unlikely, if they did we wouldn't be hearing about it at all.

      If they had general AI, they wouldn't need to build a super computer powered expert system just to tell whether someone is buying something. This is a complete waste of time. You have a better chance of reaching the moon by building longer and longer ladders than you do reaching general intelligence by hardcoding facts.

      • You have a better chance of reaching the moon by building longer and longer ladders than you do reaching general intelligence by hardcoding facts.
        I know; you're preaching to the choir. The entire approach is wrong but the AI fanbois insist that it's like The Moon Is A Harsh Mistress and adding more hardware will magically make it 'wake up' and become sentient. The marketing and media hype-machine has done it's job too well on too many people.
    • by jythie ( 914043 ) on Tuesday January 08, 2019 @08:22PM (#57928022)
      It is neither.

      This is not exactly a new, they put out these proposal requests all the time. They select some problem of interest, or more often a whole bag of problems and post a request for proposals, then see what various groups think they can accomplish along those lines. The actual research is a lot less dramatic than pieces like this suggest, and really just represent DARPA giving seed grants based off some theme to a bunch of teams and seeing what they come up with.
    • by ljw1004 ( 764174 )

      They're either buying into the same marketing and media hype for the half-assed excuse for AI everyone keeps trotting out, or they've got something nobody else has, meaning general AI. The latter is highly unlikely, if they did we wouldn't be hearing about it at all.

      Or the option you didn't mention -- they know that existing ML-based systems are really good at pattern-matching, and that many forms of pattern-matching don't require full general AI in order to be cost effective, and they're applying it (like the headline and article says) to another domain for pattern-matching.

    • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
      They are. Think of realtime transcripts of all US talk radio. The voice prints of all US cell phone calls getting keyword detection.
      Then have the computing power to not just use keywords but seek patterns in they way people are responding to news.
      Thats old tech and its days too late in the news cycle. Days after talk radio has made a local story national news again.
      How is the US going to be swayed by NATO/UK/US gov propaganda again?
      Ready for another Syria/Libya/Vietnam/Iraq war?

      Can local news in any
  • I guess if anyone has the budget for something like this, it's DARPA, but my mind would be blown if this were anywhere near useful in less than 50-70 years. Predicting markets alone would be an incredibly daunting task to try and handle with AI, let alone something as generic as "schemas".

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Roger C. Schank, Robert P. Abelson et al did this decades ago. What DARPA calls a "schema" was called a "script' by Schank. His most-referenced book was "Scripts, Plans, Goals, and Understanding: An Inquiry Into Human Knowledge Structures " [amazon.com]

    I am quite astonished to find the DARPA reference b/c I know that there are literally hundreds of DOD-related systems that use ideas from Schank and others to gather and correlate intelligence and make suggestions for action. These are not new systems, most have been in

    • I was at the Performers' Meeting today, and the presenter made explicit reference to Schank. They are well aware of that work. The problem (or should I say, one problem) was that it didn't scale easily. Making a restaurant script/ schema was easy; now think of all the other schemas that would be needed to handle lots more events, and think of trying to write them all by hand.

      If you want to know what it's about, you might read the BAA.

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