Noosa News
Humans lose to machines every time. We need to plan for that, expert says
“But we can’t blame the human, we need to learn how to make human and machine work together more effectively.”
Professor Quevedo, along with colleagues Marius Protte and Professor René Fahr from Paderborn University in Germany, did a study involving a human-piloted drone.
The researchers found the more feedback the pilot got, the worse the pilot performed.
This is in direct contrast to machine learning, which improves its performance through immediate and frequent feedback.
“One thing we found is that people, when they were successful they tend to overestimate their capabilities,” he said.
“So this raises the question, what information should you give to people so they make good decisions? If they have been successful, should you always…
-
Noosa News8 hours agoMan charged over allegedly abandoning Arnie the German shepherd in car after claiming dog and vehicle were stolen
-
Noosa News9 hours agoMotorcyclist dies in crash with truck
-
Noosa News24 hours agoPolice officer who tracked Toyah Cordingley’s phone gives evidence at Rajwinder Singh’s murder trial
-
General23 hours agoARIA Awards 2025 winners: Amyl & The Sniffers and Ninajirachi dominate
