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The Optimal Choice of Hypothesis Is the Weakest, Not the Shortest

Abstract

If AA and BB are sets such that ABA \subset B, generalisation may be understood as the inference from AA of a hypothesis sufficient to construct BB. One might infer any number of hypotheses from AA, yet only some of those may generalise to BB. How can one know which are likely to generalise? One strategy is to choose the shortest, equating the ability to compress information with the ability to generalise (a proxy for intelligence). We examine this in the context of a mathematical formalism of enactive cognition. We show that compression is neither necessary nor sufficient to maximise performance (measured in terms of the probability of a hypothesis generalising). We formulate a proxy unrelated to length or simplicity, called weakness. We show that if tasks are uniformly distributed, then there is no choice of proxy that performs at least as well as weakness maximisation in all tasks while performing strictly better in at least one. In experiments comparing maximum weakness and minimum description length in the context of binary arithmetic, the former generalised at between 1.11.1 and 55 times the rate of the latter. We argue this demonstrates that weakness is a far better proxy, and explains why Deepmind's Apperception Engine is able to generalise effectively.

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