Ilya Sutskever is the co-founder of OpenAI, is one of the most cited computer scientist in history with over 165,000 citations, and to me, is one of the most brilliant and insightful minds ever in the field of deep learning. There are very few people in this world who I would rather talk to and brainstorm with about deep learning, intelligence, and life than Ilya, on and off the mic.
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EPISODE LINKS: Ilya's Twitter: https://twitter.com/ilyasut Ilya's Website: https://www.cs.toronto.edu/~ilya/
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Here's the outline of the episode. On some podcast players you should be able to click the timestamp to jump to that time.
OUTLINE: 00:00 - Introduction 02:23 - AlexNet paper and the ImageNet moment 08:33 - Cost functions 13:39 - Recurrent neural networks 16:19 - Key ideas that led to success of deep learning 19:57 - What's harder to solve: language or vision? 29:35 - We're massively underestimating deep learning 36:04 - Deep double descent 41:20 - Backpropagation 42:42 - Can neural networks be made to reason? 50:35 - Long-term memory 56:37 - Language models 1:00:35 - GPT-2 1:07:14 - Active learning 1:08:52 - Staged release of AI systems 1:13:41 - How to build AGI? 1:25:00 - Question to AGI 1:32:07 - Meaning of life