Talk:Explainable artificial intelligence
![]() | Articles for creation Start‑class ![]() | |||||||||
|
![]() | Technology Start‑class | ||||||
|
Recent edits
@AIxprt: This recent edit removed one of the references from this article. Why did you remove this reference? Jarble (talk) 13:10, 13 August 2019 (UTC)
Changes for History Section, Research in Explanation in the 70s, 80s, and 90s in Symbolic AI
The previous discussion of XAI did not address the large amount of work done in explanation in the 70s, 80s, and 90s. Although XAI is commonly used in the context of deep learning, to restrict discussions of XAI to deep learning alone is to presuppose that XAI will only be developed in that context and not in the context of hybrid symbolic / deep learning systems. Minimally to address the historical record, the earlier work needs to be further addressed.
I just wanted to explain a bit more about the changes I added to flesh out the history of explanation in the 70s, 80s, and 90s. The previous coverage only mentioned MYCIN, ignoring explanation research in intelligent tutoring systems, causal reasoning, explanation-based learning, and truth maintenance systems that I have tried to correct.
Indeed, much more could also be said about the ability of current ontological, semantic web, knowledge based, and intelligent tutoring systems to support explanation. I haven't pursued that at this point, or the point about symbolic approaches addressing primarily what Daniel Kahneman calls Type II systems while deep learning approaches better address Type I systems. I know that Yoshua Bengio and Gary Marcus have debated this, while others such as Doug Lenat, Chris Re, and Oren Etzioni, and others I am most likely missing have also made this distinction. The point here is just to give prior work its due, without taking away from all the amazing accomplishments of deep learning.
Yet more could be said about the work of explanation in abduction, such as Jerry Hobbs work in Tacitus. More could be said about the role of explanation in explanation-based reasoning and reasoning by analogy, as covered by some of the chapters in Machine Learning, Volume III. Veritas Aeterna (talk) 04:12, 21 January 2020 (UTC)