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Document Information

Type: Academic text / report page
File Size: 2.18 MB
Summary

This document discusses the limitations of Legg and Hutter's model of intelligent agents when applied to real-world scenarios, particularly regarding the separation of reward mechanisms from cognition. The text argues that biological intelligence often involves self-defined goals rather than external rewards and proposes treating external rewards as a theoretical test framework rather than an architectural necessity. It contrasts this approach with IQ tests, suggesting that formal definitions of intelligence can be inferred from real-world behavior.

People (2)

Name Role Context
Legg
Hutter

Organizations (1)

Name Type Context
House Oversight Committee

Relationships (1)

Key Quotes (4)

"A notable aspect of the Legg and Hutter formalism is the separation of the reward mechanism from the cognitive mechanisms of the agent."
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"Not all human intelligent activity is specifically reward-seeking in nature"
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Quote #2
"formal measures like the universal, pragmatic and efficient pragmatic general intelligence are viewed as not directly applicable to real-world intelligences"
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"In a sense, this interpretation makes our formalized measures of intelligence the opposite of real-world IQ tests."
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Quote #4

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