Cookies help us display personalized product recommendations and ensure you have great shopping experience.

By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
SmartData CollectiveSmartData Collective
  • Analytics
    AnalyticsShow More
    unusual trading activity
    Signal Or Noise? A Decision Tree For Evaluating Unusual Trading Activity
    3 Min Read
    software developer using ai
    How Data Analytics Helps Developers Deliver Better Tech Services
    8 Min Read
    ai for stock trading
    Can Data Analytics Help Investors Outperform Warren Buffett
    9 Min Read
    media monitoring
    Signals In The Noise: Using Media Monitoring To Manage Negative Publicity
    5 Min Read
    data analytics
    How Data Analytics Can Help You Construct A Financial Weather Map
    4 Min Read
  • Big Data
  • BI
  • Exclusive
  • IT
  • Marketing
  • Software
Search
© 2008-25 SmartData Collective. All Rights Reserved.
Reading: Why computers can’t figure out words
Share
Notification
Font ResizerAa
SmartData CollectiveSmartData Collective
Font ResizerAa
Search
  • About
  • Help
  • Privacy
Follow US
© 2008-23 SmartData Collective. All Rights Reserved.
SmartData Collective > Big Data > Data Quality > Why computers can’t figure out words
Data Quality

Why computers can’t figure out words

StephenBaker1
StephenBaker1
7 Min Read
SHARE

There was a time that when you wanted a quick lunch, you told the cook behind the counter exactly what you wanted. …’Easy on the onions, and why don’t you slice one of those pickles real fine and put it in there, with just a dab of mayonnaise?’…Then we industrialized the process, and the people behind the counter at McDonalds don’t even have to know about food or money: They just hit a code for the order on the register.

There was a time that when you wanted a quick lunch, you told the cook behind the counter exactly what you wanted. …’Easy on the onions, and why don’t you slice one of those pickles real fine and put it in there, with just a dab of mayonnaise?’…Then we industrialized the process, and the people behind the counter at McDonalds don’t even have to know about food or money: They just hit a code for the order on the register.

J. Stoors Hall uses that example in Beyond A.I. to introduce what he calls ‘formalist float.’ We formalize information for efficiency, either communication or logistics, and in the process we lose customized detail. That’s the price we pay for the systems we build. We attempt to codify justice into laws, education into curricula, and information into ones and zeros.

In each of these examples, there’s a size-able gap between what the system decrees and what the individual wants or needs, or is attempting to communicate.

More Read

Empowering the Business Ecosystem with Business Intelligence [VIDEO]
How to Stay Ahead of the Data Protection Curve in 2016
Big Data and the SME: Prepare to Succeed
Niche Data Tactics to Take Your Business to the Next Level
How Big Data can Help Marketers Cater to an International Audience

I’ve been thinking about this formalist float as I write about computers struggling with human language. The ‘real’ world, with all of its complexity, cannot be rendered accurately in symbols. That’s why we use the symbols in the first place: to generalize. In a sense, each word we use is as imprecise as that key the McDonald’s worker punches for the quarter pounder. There’s something I’m thinking, it’s as unique to me as the sandwich with the pickle and the dab of mayonnaise. But you and I don’t share a word for that exact thought. So I come as close as I can with our formal vocabulary, and then we use gestures, voice tone, context, and shared memories to narrow the gap between the formal and the individual case. It’s that cultural negotiation that the computer cannot understand.

We need words to be inexact, because if they were too precise we’d each have a unique vocabulary of several billion words, all of them intelligible to every one else. (Maybe that’s what animals have.) I’d have a unique word for the sip of coffee I just took at 6:59 on this fifth of July, which was flavored with the anxiety that I’d better get out on my bike before the day heats up. (That would be as useless to me as to everyone else. A word has to be used at least twice to have any purpose.)

If you think about it, each word is a lingua franca, a fragment of a clumsy common language we struggle with. Imagine I say that I’m ‘weary.’ I’m thinking one thing, and you might have a very different idea. Maybe I carried a load a long way in the sun. I may have a troubled child. I may have argued with my editor or spent fruitless hours trying to balance my checkbook. You certainly have different ideas, based on your own experience, about what ‘weary’ means. In addition to all different meanings, it might also send other signals to you. Maybe where you come from, it has a slightly rarefied feel, and you’re wondering whether I’m signaling my sophistication. In any case, we don’t know what each other is thinking. But that single word ‘weary’ extends a tiny bridge between us.

Now, with that bridge in place, the word shared, we dig deeper to see if we can agree on its meaning. You study my expression and my tone of voice. That communicates a lot. Someone who has won the Boston Marathon might look contentedly weary. Another, in a divorce hearing, looks anything but. I may slack my jaw in an exaggerated way, illustrating the word with a gesture, as if to say, ‘Know what I mean?’ In this tiny negotiation, we’re bridging the formalist float. And closing that gap is the challenge for computers like IBM’s Watson, the one I’m writing about.

As computers struggle to bridge the formalist float, millions of humans are making it even more difficult for them. We’re distancing ourselves from formal structures. With shorthand and abbreviations in text messages, many of us are creating our own patois. Humans have done this forever. It’s how Spanish, Portuguese, Italian and French all grew out of Latin. But technology is speeding it up. The meaning of a single emoticon–;…gt;)–evolves day by day, tribe by tribe.

Verbally, we’re making it even harder. I hear conversations all the time in which people bypass the formal vocabulary altogether and rely entirely on sounds, gestures and tone. ‘So I’m like uuuun, and she’s like hhhmmm?’ Characters in Jane Austin’s novels would find words for these feelings, perhaps ‘befuddled’ and ‘huffy.’ Computers could look those words up and have at least an inkling of what we’re talking about. They’ll never bridge the formalist float entirely–our complexity cannot be reduced to ones and zeros. But eliminating words from our discourse makes their job even tougher.

TAGGED:data visualization
Share This Article
Facebook Pinterest LinkedIn
Share

Follow us on Facebook

Latest News

data migration risk prevention
Best Approach to Risk Management for Data Migration in Data-Driven Businesses
Big Data Data Management Exclusive Risk Management
AI in branding
How Data Analytics and Data Mining Strengthen Brand Identity Services
Big Data Exclusive
Hidden AI, a risk?
Hidden AI, Real Risk: A Governance Roadmap For Mid-Market Organizations
Artificial Intelligence Exclusive Infographic
unusual trading activity
Signal Or Noise? A Decision Tree For Evaluating Unusual Trading Activity
Analytics Exclusive Infographic

Stay Connected

1.2KFollowersLike
33.7KFollowersFollow
222FollowersPin

You Might also Like

Analyzing Olympic Success by Country with Data Visualization

7 Min Read

Ease-of-use Key to Successful Business Intelligence Deployments

10 Min Read

New Trends in BI, Analytics and Social Media

9 Min Read

10 R Packages Every Data Scientist Should Know About

1 Min Read

SmartData Collective is one of the largest & trusted community covering technical content about Big Data, BI, Cloud, Analytics, Artificial Intelligence, IoT & more.

ai in ecommerce
Artificial Intelligence for eCommerce: A Closer Look
Artificial Intelligence
giveaway chatbots
How To Get An Award Winning Giveaway Bot
Big Data Chatbots Exclusive

Quick Link

  • About
  • Contact
  • Privacy
Follow US
© 2008-25 SmartData Collective. All Rights Reserved.
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?