Litcius/Paper detail

Machine Learning, Functions and Goals

Patrick Butlin

2022Croatian Journal of Philosophy21 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Machine learning researchers distinguish between reinforcement learning and supervised learning and refer to reinforcement learning systems as “agents”. This paper vindicates the claim that systems trained by reinforcement learning are agents while those trained by supervised learning are not. Systems of both kinds satisfy Dretske’s criteria for agency, because they both learn to produce outputs selectively in response to inputs. However, reinforcement learning is sensitive to the instrumental value of outputs, giving rise to systems which exploit the effects of outputs on subsequent inputs to achieve good performance over episodes of interaction with their environments. Supervised learning systems, in contrast, merely learn to produce better outputs in response to individual inputs.

Topics & Concepts

Reinforcement learningAgency (philosophy)Computer scienceArtificial intelligenceExploitContrast (vision)Machine learningReinforcementValue (mathematics)Supervised learningSemi-supervised learningPsychologyEpistemologySocial psychologyArtificial neural networkPhilosophyComputer securityEcosystem dynamics and resilienceEmbodied and Extended CognitionEthics and Social Impacts of AI