Advertisement

‘I’ll take human ingenuity for $2,000’

Share

A mere three years ago, the IBM computer now known as Watson was a “Jeopardy!”-playing fool. And that’s putting it mildly.

Watson had the verbal skills of a toddler. It botched the solutions to the game-show clues with howlers that filled IBM’s research lab with laughter — and raised deep concern. Once, when queried about a famous French bacteriologist, Watson skipped right past Louis Pasteur and responded instead: “What is, ‘How tasty was my little Frenchman?’” (the title of a 1971 Brazilian movie about cannibals). Even worse, Watson churned away for nearly two hours to come up with such nonsense. Things have changed. The former bionic idiot, making its man-versus-machine debut on “Jeopardy!” this week, is now smart and fast, with a startling command of idiomatic English. This vastly improved Watson is giving “Jeopardy!” legends Ken Jennings and Brad Rutter all they can handle.

The question now is whether the computer has unfair advantages. Is its speed on the buzzer too fast, its trove of resource documents too big? Those debates are sure to heat up if the computer wins. And if it doesn’t, you can bet that an even faster and more precise version of Watson will come back next year programmed for revenge.

Advertisement

The smart machines in our life, from Watson and Google’s supercomputer to the iPhone, are advancing relentlessly. By most counts, our cave-painting ancestors had brains comparable to our own. But in the 40,000 years between us and them, our computational tools have evolved from piles of stones to the abacus, the calculator and now this machine that can make life miserable for humans on the “Jeopardy!” set.

And every time Watson puts its digital foot in its mouth — it still happens at least once or twice a game — researchers can tweak the machine’s instructions and its performance improves. Other programs, meanwhile, lead it to make automatic adjustments in search of more accurate answers. This is known as machine learning, a vital component within Watson.

It’s all too easy to see Watson do its thing and conclude that legions of such machines will soon relieve us of our brainwork and our jobs, if not our souls. In fact, machines like Watson will no doubt displace people who are paid to answer questions, probably starting with telephone call centers.

But humans will adjust, as we always have. When our inventions, from tractors and cotton gins to spell-checking software, take over certain chores, we move to niches beyond the range of these tools. And believe me, after watching Watson in action for a year, I can assure you that there’s plenty of room in the work world for the still-peerless human mind.

You see, Watson isn’t nearly as smart as it looks on TV. Outside of its specialty of answering questions, the computer remains largely clueless. It knows nothing. When it comes up with an answer, such as “What is ‘Othello?,’” the name of Shakespeare’s play is simply the combination of ones and zeros that correlates with millions of calculations it has carried out. Statistics tell it that there is a high probability that the word “Othello” matches with a “tragedy,” a “captain” and a “Moor.” But Watson doesn’t understand the meaning of those words any more than Google does, or, for that matter, a parrot raised in a household of Elizabethan scholars.

Watson is incapable of coming up with fresh ideas, much less creating theories, cracking jokes, telling a story or carrying on a conversation. Its ability is simply to make sense of questions and then scour a trove of data for the most likely answers. It represents a dramatic advance in artificial intelligence, but like another famous IBM computer, Deep Blue, Watson excels on a limited playing field, in a game defined by clear, rigid rules.

Advertisement

In 1997, Deep Blue beat the reigning world chess champion, Garry Kasparov. Chess remains forever tied to the format the computer aced: The same queens, knights and pawns moving in knowable combinations — albeit trillions of them — on the 64 squares of the board. The best players are now machines.

But consider “Jeopardy!” The game is written by humans for humans; it can easily be adapted. In coming seasons, writers could quell the rise of Watson and its ilk by shifting toward clues that favor the subtleties of the human mind. This means fewer of the factoids that Watson feasts on: the conquest that occurred in 1066 (“What is Norman?”), the biblical figure who lived in a whale (“Who is Jonah?”). A revised “Jeopardy!” would feature more implicit clues, based on judgment, innuendo and the human experience.

This clue, for example, ties Watson into knots: “Look in this direction and you’ll see the wainscoting.” The answer is rooted in human experience, not data. Only a “Jeopardy!” contestant with a body is likely to understand it and come up with the right response: “What is down?”

More than base knowledge, that simple clue requires thought. That’s an area where humans still have an edge. The rest of us will adapt to the invasion of question-answering Watsons by focusing on work at which the human brain excels — and will leave the rest to machines. We’ve already outsourced long division, spelling and much of our highway navigation to machines. Now we’ll look to them more and more to dig through mountains of data and come up with answers for us. This should free us up to do what remains uniquely human, at least for now: generating fresh ideas.

Stephen Baker is the author of the about to be published “Final Jeopardy: Man vs. Machine and the Quest to Know Everything.”

Advertisement