A: I'm drawing on the field of computational psychiatry, which assumes we can learn about a patient who's depressed or hallucinating from studying AI algorithms
like reinforcement learning.
Not exact matches
With time and positive
reinforcement from you, she will
learn to treat others as she would
like to be treated.
Back in the early 1950s, when I was a graduate student at Harvard, the general assumption was that language,
like all other human activities, is just a collection of
learned behaviors developed through the same methods used to train animals — by
reinforcement.
Most video - game - playing AIs use
reinforcement learning to develop a strategy, relying on feedback
like game points to tell them when they are playing well.
While eLearning can present five times the material of a classroom training, the material needs
reinforcement, and it's the frills
like gamification, social
learning and the opportunity to set up a personal
learning network (PLN) that make the difference between a lackluster ROI and a significant ROI.
That said, for those of us who have heard again and again that dogs are just domesticated wolves living in a «pack» of humans — and who hasn't heard that more times than you can count, thanks to the popularization of the concept on TV — it might be helpful to
learn all the scientific reasoning behind how wolves and dogs are different (and how we misunderstood wolves and their pack interactions for a very, very long time), why those «alpha dog» approaches aren't the best way to relate to your dog (and in fact, can even cause more problems), and why alternate approaches
like positive
reinforcement and reading the body language of a dog as a dog and not a mini wolf do work.
Trainers wanting to help animals who are fearful, aggressive, shut - down — or even animals who are expected to perform complicated tasks
like being guide dogs or horses — can
learn the more comprehensive nuances of positive
reinforcement.
If you'd
like to
learn more about clicker training people, or the power of positive
reinforcement, go to tagteach.com.
The Power of Positivity It is important to do some positive
reinforcement training with parrots, because, just
like puppies, they are smart and love to
learn tricks and commands.