Unsupervisedly Learned Representations: Should the Quest be Over?

21 Jan 2020  ·  Daniel N. Nissani ·

There exists a Classification accuracy gap of about 20% between our best methods of generating Unsupervisedly Learned Representations and the accuracy rates achieved by (naturally Unsupervisedly Learning) humans. We are at our fourth decade at least in search of this class of paradigms. It thus may well be that we are looking in the wrong direction. We present in this paper a possible solution to this puzzle. We demonstrate that Reinforcement Learning schemes can learn representations, which may be used for Pattern Recognition tasks such as Classification, achieving practically the same accuracy as that of humans. Our main modest contribution lies in the observations that: a. when applied to a real world environment (e.g. nature itself) Reinforcement Learning does not require labels, and thus may be considered a natural candidate for the long sought, accuracy competitive Unsupervised Learning method, and b. in contrast, when Reinforcement Learning is applied in a simulated or symbolic processing environment (e.g. a computer program) it does inherently require labels and should thus be generally classified, with some exceptions, as Supervised Learning. The corollary of these observations is that further search for Unsupervised Learning competitive paradigms which may be trained in simulated environments like many of those found in research and applications may be futile.

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