> You missed the core of my point: humans operate, including in the real world, on much less training data.
I very specifically addressed this in my response to you. How much training data is contained in 16 waking hours of navigating the world fusing all sensory data, never mind data being simultaneously generated within the mind while this is all going on, from birth til death? From birth til pushing that shopping cart?
Far, far more than in all the training datasets being used for AI.
I also addressed this again in my reply to the sibling comment.
People tend to discount how much data humans have passing through their minds 24/7.
A human isn’t born in a vacuum as a fully formed adult and dropped into the shopping cart navigation problem.
A human has had far, far more training data fed into it that contains all the pieces necessary to translate to pushing a shopping cart when first seeing it, than a machine learning model which has been fed 1 million videos of a robot pushing a shopping cart.
I know I saw Geoffrey Hinton say humans operate with much less training data in a talk.
It doesn't strike me as a claim that should be controversial.
As far as I know nobody can train A.I. to push a shopping cart based on a human child's training set. It's mostly not relevant to the task.