EconTalk   /     When Prediction Is Not Enough (with Teppo Felin)

Summary

If the Wright Brothers could have used AI to guide their decision making, it's almost certain they would never have gotten off the ground. That's because, points out Teppo Felin of Utah State University and Oxford, all the evidence said human flight was impossible. So how and why did the Wrights persevere? Felin explains that the human ability to ignore existing data and evidence is not only our Achilles heel, but also one of our superpowers. Topics include the problems inherent in modeling our brains after computers, and the value of not only data-driven prediction, but also belief-driven experimentation.

Subtitle
If the Wright Brothers could have used AI to guide their decision making, it's almost certain they would never have gotten off the ground. That's because, points out Teppo Felin of Utah State University and Oxford, all the evidence said human flight
Duration
01:07:10
Publishing date
2024-04-15 10:30
Link
https://www.econtalk.org/when-prediction-is-not-enough-with-teppo-felin/
Contributors
  EconTalk: Russ Roberts
author  
Enclosures
https://cdn.simplecast.com/audio/6fdba516-8381-43b0-b29f-59d05512b693/episodes/64524bd5-6d18-40a2-a70a-c342eff746a4/audio/a8eda809-ed34-456e-b063-fdb4a631facb/default_tc.mp3?aid=rss_feed&feed=wgl4xEgL
audio/mpeg

Shownotes

If the Wright Brothers could have used AI to guide their decision making, it's almost certain they would never have gotten off the ground. That's because, points out Teppo Felin of Utah State University and Oxford, all the evidence said human flight was impossible. So how and why did the Wrights persevere? Felin explains that the human ability to ignore existing data and evidence is not only our Achilles heel, but also one of our superpowers. Topics include the problems inherent in modeling our brains after computers, and the value of not only data-driven prediction, but also belief-driven experimentation.