In a new paper, our team tackles a fundamental AI problem: how can we simultaneously parse the world into objects and properties, while simultaneously inducing the rules explaining how objects change over time: https://t.co/f7mZMtwu6z (1/)

Work by @LittleBimble with @pfau, @pushmeet, Matko Bosnjak, Lars Buesing, Kevin Ellis, and Marek Sergot. (2/)
This system combines the Apperception Engine with a binary neural network to learn a provably 100% accurate model of non-trivial environments (e.g. Sokoban) from noisy raw pixel data. (3/)
The ability to learn the world dynamics sample efficiently is a key component of intelligence, according to @MelMitchell1, @GaryMarcus, @fchollet, @mpshanahan, among many others. (4/4)

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THREAD: 12 Things Everyone Should Know About IQ

1. IQ is one of the most heritable psychological traits – that is, individual differences in IQ are strongly associated with individual differences in genes (at least in fairly typical modern environments). https://t.co/3XxzW9bxLE


2. The heritability of IQ *increases* from childhood to adulthood. Meanwhile, the effect of the shared environment largely fades away. In other words, when it comes to IQ, nature becomes more important as we get older, nurture less.
https://t.co/UqtS1lpw3n


3. IQ scores have been increasing for the last century or so, a phenomenon known as the Flynn effect. https://t.co/sCZvCst3hw (N ≈ 4 million)

(Note that the Flynn effect shows that IQ isn't 100% genetic; it doesn't show that it's 100% environmental.)


4. IQ predicts many important real world outcomes.

For example, though far from perfect, IQ is the single-best predictor of job performance we have – much better than Emotional Intelligence, the Big Five, Grit, etc. https://t.co/rKUgKDAAVx https://t.co/DWbVI8QSU3


5. Higher IQ is associated with a lower risk of death from most causes, including cardiovascular disease, respiratory disease, most forms of cancer, homicide, suicide, and accident. https://t.co/PJjGNyeQRA (N = 728,160)