I think you meant "genetic algorithms", or "genetic programming",
which are related. "Genetic engineering" is more gene splicing,
probably not what you meant.

-- 
Russell Senior
[email protected]

On Wed, Nov 27, 2024 at 5:38 AM Rich Shepard <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> On Tue, 26 Nov 2024, Tomas Kuchta wrote:
>
> > It all depends how you read/understand the I in contemporary AI!
>
> AI is a broad category, similar to Chemistry, Biology, Engineering. It
> includes artificial neural networks (used for pattern matching such as
> facial recognition), genetic engineering (used for most efficient travel
> routing such as Amazon delivery drivers), fuzzy logic (quantifying
> subjectivity such as opinions in regulatory decisions), and more.
>
> My limited understanding of the common use of providing answers to questions
> suggests that's a neural network application trained on a bunch of data that
> is more limited than comprehensive.
>
> I prefer the human version of intelligence when properly developed.
>
> Rich

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