Misconceptions about AI's capabilities and the role of data are everywhere. Many believe AI is a singular, all-knowing entity, when in reality, it's a collection of algorithms producing intelligence-like outputs. Navigating and understanding the history and evolution of AI, from its origins to today's advanced language models is crucial. How do these developments, and misconceptions, impact your daily work? Are you leveraging the right tools for your needs, or are you caught up in the allure of cutting-edge technology without considering its practical application? Andriy Burkov is the author of three widely recognized books, The Hundred-Page Machine Learning Book, The Machine Learning Engineering Book, and recently The Hundred-Page Language Models book. His books have been translated into a dozen languages and are used as textbooks in many universities worldwide. His work has impacted millions of machine learning practitioners and researchers. He holds a Ph.D. in Artificial Intelligence and is a recognized expert in machine learning and natural language processing. As a machine learning expert and leader, Andriy has successfully led dozens of production-grade AI projects in different business domains at Fujitsu and Gartner. Andriy is currently Machine Learning Lead at TalentNeuron. In the episode, Richie and Andriy explore misconceptions about AI, the evolution of AI from the 1950s, the relevance of 20th-century AI research, the role of linear algebra in AI, the resurgence of recurrent neural networks, advancements in large language model architectures, the significance of reinforcement learning, the reality of AI agents, and much more. Links Mentioned in the Show: Andriy’s books: The Hundred-page Machine Learning Book, The Hundred-page Language Models BookTalentNeuronConnect with AndriySkill Track: AI FundamentalsRelated Episode: Unlocking Humanity in the Age of AI with Faisal Hoque, Founder and CEO of SHADOKARewatch sessions from RADAR: Skills Edition New to DataCamp? Learn on the go using the DataCamp mobile appEmpower your business with world-class data and AI skills with DataCamp for business
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This week, Hugo speaks with Sean Law about data science research and development at TD Ameritrade. Sean’s work on the Exploration team uses cutting edge theories and tools to build proofs of concept. At TD Ameritrade they think about a wide array of questions from conversational agents that can help customers quickly get to information that they need and going beyond chatbots. They use modern time series analysis and more advanced techniques like recurrent neural networks to predict the next time a customer might call and what they might be calling about, as well as helping investors leverage alternative data sets and make more informed decisions.
What does this proof of concept work on the edge of data science look like at TD Ameritrade and how does it differ from building prototypes and products? And How does exploration differ from production? Stick around to find out.
LINKS FROM THE SHOW
DATAFRAMED GUEST SUGGESTIONS
DataFramed Guest Suggestions (who do you want to hear on DataFramed?)
FROM THE INTERVIEW
Sean on TwitterSean's WebsiteTD Ameritrade Careers PagePyData Ann Arbor MeetupPyData Ann Arbor YouTube Channel (Videos)TDA Github Account (Time Series Pattern Matching repo to be open sourced in the coming months)Aura Shows Human Fingerprint on Global Air Quality
FROM THE SEGMENTS
Guidelines for A/B Testing (with Emily Robinson ~19:20)
Guidelines for A/B Testing (By Emily Robinson)10 Guidelines for A/B Testing Slides (By Emily Robinson)
Data Science Best Practices (with Ben Skrainka ~34:50)
Debugging (By David J. Agans)Basic Debugging With GDB (By Ben Skrainka)Sneaky Bugs and How to Find Them (with git bisect) (By Wiktor Czajkowski)Good logging practice in Python (By Victor Lin)
Original music and sounds by The Sticks.