{"title":"Data Science at the Singularity","authors":"David Donoho","doi":"arxiv-2310.00865","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"A purported `AI Singularity' has been in the public eye recently. Mass media\nand US national political attention focused on `AI Doom' narratives hawked by\nsocial media influencers. The European Commission is announcing initiatives to\nforestall `AI Extinction'. In my opinion, `AI Singularity' is the wrong\nnarrative for what's happening now; recent happenings signal something else\nentirely. Something fundamental to computation-based research really changed in\nthe last ten years. In certain fields, progress is dramatically more rapid than\npreviously, as the fields undergo a transition to frictionless reproducibility\n(FR). This transition markedly changes the rate of spread of ideas and\npractices, affects mindsets, and erases memories of much that came before. The emergence of frictionless reproducibility follows from the maturation of\n3 data science principles in the last decade. Those principles involve data\nsharing, code sharing, and competitive challenges, however implemented in the\nparticularly strong form of frictionless open services. Empirical Machine\nLearning (EML) is todays leading adherent field, and its consequent rapid\nchanges are responsible for the AI progress we see. Still, other fields can and\ndo benefit when they adhere to the same principles. Many rapid changes from this maturation are misidentified. The advent of FR\nin EML generates a steady flow of innovations; this flow stimulates outsider\nintuitions that there's an emergent superpower somewhere in AI. This opens the\nway for PR to push worrying narratives: not only `AI Extinction', but also the\nsupposed monopoly of big tech on AI research. The helpful narrative observes\nthat the superpower of EML is adherence to frictionless reproducibility\npractices; these practices are responsible for the striking progress in AI that\nwe see everywhere.","PeriodicalId":501323,"journal":{"name":"arXiv - STAT - Other Statistics","volume":"21 2","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2023-10-02","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"arXiv - STAT - Other Statistics","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/arxiv-2310.00865","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
A purported `AI Singularity' has been in the public eye recently. Mass media
and US national political attention focused on `AI Doom' narratives hawked by
social media influencers. The European Commission is announcing initiatives to
forestall `AI Extinction'. In my opinion, `AI Singularity' is the wrong
narrative for what's happening now; recent happenings signal something else
entirely. Something fundamental to computation-based research really changed in
the last ten years. In certain fields, progress is dramatically more rapid than
previously, as the fields undergo a transition to frictionless reproducibility
(FR). This transition markedly changes the rate of spread of ideas and
practices, affects mindsets, and erases memories of much that came before. The emergence of frictionless reproducibility follows from the maturation of
3 data science principles in the last decade. Those principles involve data
sharing, code sharing, and competitive challenges, however implemented in the
particularly strong form of frictionless open services. Empirical Machine
Learning (EML) is todays leading adherent field, and its consequent rapid
changes are responsible for the AI progress we see. Still, other fields can and
do benefit when they adhere to the same principles. Many rapid changes from this maturation are misidentified. The advent of FR
in EML generates a steady flow of innovations; this flow stimulates outsider
intuitions that there's an emergent superpower somewhere in AI. This opens the
way for PR to push worrying narratives: not only `AI Extinction', but also the
supposed monopoly of big tech on AI research. The helpful narrative observes
that the superpower of EML is adherence to frictionless reproducibility
practices; these practices are responsible for the striking progress in AI that
we see everywhere.