At princeton i think it was back in 2012, this is when there was the start of enthusiasm over big data was happening. Isple were saying big data transforming everything from finance to sports to journalism, marketing, insurance, education. But no one was yet working on how big data would or would not transform the criminal Justice System. Id had a longstanding interest in the criminal Justice System and i started to ask, how are the police, courts, corrections, leveraging things like predictive algorithms and how is it changing daily operations . I quickly realized there was not actually ironically very good data,n police use of big and thats when i decided to pursue an ethnographic study on that question. Susan we will have lots of time to explore the details, but what is the conclusion you came to after you spent this amount of time investigating the topic . Sarah the conclusion is basically that instead of thinking about data as some sort of objective or fundamentally unbiased tool,
Though he died in 1902. His style is still alive and well thanks to ai so what were doing is were analyzing, going gods audio recordings to see out here interpret a given piece of music and try to teach to an ai system so that i could play an expressive style of bringing going back life, its as if glen golds ghost is sitting at the piano. Those who knew him a star christian knows or doesnt just want to imitate human creations. He wants to explore unknown to mentions through his art. With the help from ai, hes collected some other will be signals on this one become very rich as we take this great unknown outer space and we try to capture radio signals from space. And then we have our man made a scan it to look for patterns which we wouldnt be able to find on our own. 2 feet in transcriptions from space interpreted by an ai using familiar harmonies. Its a bit but a bit bizarre. Yet somehow sublime. When you kind of you enter a question and you get a reply, you never would have anticipate
Intelligence creates things weve never seen or heard before. Like gustav mahler, unfinished 10th symphony now completed in its entirety. I am the deep Neural Network news net has managed to complete with the composer, couldnt, ai is invading our lives and the arts. Just how much is the subject of ones research, age rector of the Max Planck Institute for Human Development in berlin. He talks with us about ai and how to deal with Intelligent Machines with your head of their research center, humans and machines. Why do you think its important to study the everything machines . Because machines are in new act or in our world . You know, this is the 1st time that weve created a tool that can make decisions on its own. Its going to be driving cars. Its going to be making decisions about who gets higher than 500 and its going to help us create art and so on. So what would you say are the possible scenarios were looking at in the near future . The problem with Machine Learning is that it might
Cspan. Org, or listen on the free cspan radio app. Susan sarah brayne, your new book seems like it is welltimed for a National Debate on policing, but you tell readers youve been working on the project about a decade. How did you get started in this interest in big data and the police . Sarah when i was a phd student at princeton i think it was back in 2012, this is when there was the start of enthusiasm over big data was happening. People were saying big data is transforming everything from finance to sports to journalism, marketing, insurance, education. But no one was yet working on how big data would or would not transform the criminal Justice System. Id had a longstanding interest in the criminal Justice System and i started to ask, how are the police, courts, corrections, leveraging things like predictive algorithms and how is it changing daily operations . I quickly realized there was not actually ironically very good data on police use of big data, and thats when i decided to p
[captions Copyright National cable satellite corp. 2020] [captioning performed by the national captioning institute, which is responsible for its caption content and accuracy. Visit ncicap. Org] susan sarah brayne, your new book seems like it is welltimed for a National Debate on policing, but you tell readers youve been working on the project about a decade. How did you get started in this interest in big data and the police . Sarah when i was a phd student at princeton i think it was back in 2012, this is when there was the start of enthusiasm over big data was happening. People were saying big data is transforming everything from finance to sports to journalism, marketing, insurance, education. But no one was yet working on how big data would or would not transform the criminal Justice System. Id had a longstanding interest in the criminal Justice System and i started to ask, how are the police, courts, corrections, leveraging things like predictive algorithms and how is it changing