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NYU PSYCH-GA 3405.001 / DS-GA 3001.014 : Advancing AI through cognitive science

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Advancing AI through cognitive science - Spring 2019

Instructor: Brenden Lake
Assistant Professor of Psychology and Data Science
New York University

Meeting time and location:
Thursday 4-5:50 PM
Meyer Room 465 (4 Washington Place)

Course numbers:
PSYCH-GA 3405.001 (Psychology)
DS-GA 3001.013 (Data Science)

Office hours:
Wednesdays 10-11:00 am, or by appointment; 60 5th Ave., Room 610

Summary: Why are people smarter than machines? This course explores how the study of human intelligence can inform and improve artificial intelligence. We will look to cognitive science, with special focus on cognitive development, to help elucidate a set of "key ingredients" that are important components of human learning and thought, but are either underutilized or absent in contemporary artificial intelligence. Through readings and discussion, we will cover ingredients such as "intuitive physics," "intuitive psychology," "compositionality," "causality," and "learning-to-learn," although students will be encouraged to contribute other ingredients. Each ingredient will be discussed and compared from the perspectives of both cognitive science and AI, with readings drawn from both fields with roughly a 50/50 proportion.

This is a small discussion-based seminar, so please come ready to participate in the discussion. Please note that this syllabus is not final and there may be further adjustments.

Pre-requisites

  • This course is intended for graduate students in cognitive science or graduate students in data science / AI.
  • Students are not expected to have a background in both cognitive science and AI. Instead, students may have experience in one field and the desire to learn about the other. Ideally, at the end of the course, students will have a deeper appreciation of contemporary issues in both fields and their potential for synergy.
  • At minimum, it would be very good to have taken a graduate level psychology course, OR a graduate level machine learning / AI course. If you have taken neither, this probably not the right course for you.
  • Programming is not a requirement for this course, although students may choose to incorporate programming in their final project.

Grading

The final grade is based on the final paper or project (50%), written reactions to the reading (25%), and participating in discussions (25%).

The final paper or project is done individually. For the final assignment, students may either write a final paper that proposes an additional ingredient of human intelligence that is underutilized in AI, or complete a project that implements one of the ingredients discussed in an algorithm. The final assignment proposal is due on Thursday, April 4 (one half page written). The final assignment is due on Tuesday, May 14.

Course discussion

We will be using Piazza for reactions to readings and class discussion.

Final assignment

  • The final assignment is due Tuesday, May 14.
  • The final paper or project is done individually (not as a group).
  • Option 1: A final paper that proposes an additional ingredient of human intelligence that is underutilized in AI. The paper should summarize the psychological literature on the ingredient, and discuss the relevant AI literature or lack thereof (about 8 pages)
  • Option 2: Complete a project that implements an important aspect of one of the ingredients discussed in class (intuitive physics, intuitive psychology, compositionality etc.) in an algorithm (with a 4 page writeup)
  • If you can link the project to your research, that's encouraged!
  • The final assignment proposal is due on Thursday, April 4 (one half page written). Submit via email with the file name lastname-aai-proposal.pdf (brenden@nyu.edu).
  • Please submit final assignment via email (brenden@nyu.edu) with the file name lastname-aai-final.pdf

Course policies

Auditing: Please email instructor to see if there are available seats. Priority goes to registered students and then by date of audit request.

Overview of topics and schedule

  • 1/31 Introduction and overview
  • 2/7 Deep learning – Lecture
  • 2/14 Deep learning - Discussion
  • 2/21 Intuitive physics (part 1: humans)
  • 2/28 Intuitive physics (part 2: machines)
  • 3/7 Intuitive psychology (part 1: humans)
  • 3/14 Intuitive psychology (part 2: machines)
  • 3/21 NO CLASS. Spring Recess
  • 3/28 Compositionality
  • 4/4 Causality
  • Final assignment proposal due (Thursday 4/4)
  • 4/11 Learning-to-learn
  • 4/18 Critiques of “Building machines that learn and think like people”
  • 4/25 Language and Culture
  • 5/2 Emotion and Embodiment
  • 5/9 TBD
  • Final assignment due (Tuesday 5/14)

Detailed schedule and readings

Please see below for the assigned readings for each class (to be read before class). Before each class, students will be asked to submit a reaction to the readings (three paragraphs). Reaction posts are submitted via Piazza. Papers are available for download on NYU Classes in the "Resources" folder. Reactions are due by midnight the day before class so that I have time to read the reactions.

1/31 Introduction and overview

  • No assigned readings

2/7 Deep learning – Lecture

2/14 Deep learning - Discussion

2/21 Intuitive physics (part 1: humans)

  • Building machines that learn and think like people (Section 4 through 4.1, pg. 9-11)
  • Spelke, E. S. (1990). Principles of object perception. Cognitive Science 14(1):29–56.
  • Xu, F., & Carey, S. (1996). Infants’ metaphysics: The case of numerical identity. Cognitive psychology, 30(2), 111-153.
  • Battaglia, P. W., Hamrick, J. B. & Tenenbaum, J. B. (2013). Simulation as an engine of physical scene understanding. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 110(45):18327–32.

2/28 Intuitive physics (part 2: machines)

3/7 Intuitive psychology (part 1: humans)

  • Building machines that learn and think like people (Section 4.1.2, pg. 11-2)
  • Woodward, A. L. (1998). Infants selectively encode the goal object of an actor's reach. Cognition, 69(1), 1-34.
  • Csibra, G., Biro, S., Koos, O. & Gergely, G. (2003). One-year-old infants use teleological representations of actions productively. Cognitive Science 27:111–33
  • Baker, C. L., Jara-Ettinger, J., Saxe, R. & Tenenbaum, J. B. (2017). Rational quantitative attribution of beliefs, desires and percepts in human mentalizing. Nature Human Behaviour.

3/14 Intuitive psychology (part 2: machines)

3/21 NO CLASS. Spring Recess

3/28 Compositionality

4/4 Causality

4/11 Learning-to-learn

4/18 Critiques of “Building machines that learn and think like people”

  • Building machines that learn and think like people (Section 5-end, pg. 19-25)
  • Commentaries to read:
    • Botvinick et al., “Building machines that learn and think for themselves”
    • Caglar and Hanson, "Back to the future: The return of cognitive functionalism"
    • Chater and Oaksford, “Theories or fragments?”
    • Clegg and Corriveu, “Children begin with the same start-up software, but their software updates are cultural “
    • Davis and Marcus, “Causal generative models are just a start”
    • Dennet and Lambert, "Thinking like animals or like colleagues?"
    • Hanson, Lampinen, Suriv, McClelland, “Building on prior knowledge without building it in”
    • MacLennan, “Benefits of embodiment”
    • Moerman, “The argument for single-purpose robots”
    • Pierre-Yves Oudeyer, "Autonomous development annd learning in AI and robotics: Scaling up deep learning to human-like learning"
    • Spelke and Blass, “Intelligent machines and human minds”
    • Tessler, Goodman, Frank, “Avoiding frostbite: It helps to learn from others”
  • Response, Lake, Ullman, Gershman, Tenenbaum, “Ingredients of intelligence: From classic debates to an engineering roadmap” (pg. 50-59)

4/25 Language and Culture

5/2 Emotion and Embodiment

  • Yurovsky, D., Smith, L. B., & Yu, C. (2013). Statistical word learning at scale: The baby's view is better. Developmental Science, 16(6), 959-966.
  • Ong, D. C., Zaki, J., & Goodman, N. D. (2015). Affective cognition: Exploring lay theories of emotion. Cognition, 143, 141-162.
  • Ossmy, O., Hoch, J. E., MacAlpine, P., Hasan, S., Stone, P., & Adolph, K. E. (2018). Variety wins: Soccer-playing robots and infant walking. Frontiers in Neurorobotics, 12, 19

5/9 TBD

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NYU PSYCH-GA 3405.001 / DS-GA 3001.014 : Advancing AI through cognitive science


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