Model helps computers sort data more like humans

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MIT associate professor Josh Tenenbaum and his former student Charles Kemp have developed a computer algorithm that can select the best type of structure to fit a set of data. Such structures shown here include linear order rings and clusters. Image  ...
MIT associate professor Josh Tenenbaum and his former student, Charles Kemp, have developed a computer algorithm that can select the best type of structure to fit a set of data. Such structures, shown here, include linear order, rings and clusters. Image courtesy / Charles Kemp

(PhysOrg.com) -- Humans have a natural tendency to find order in sets of information, a skill that has proven difficult to replicate in computers. Faced with a large set of data, computers don't know where to begin -- unless they're programmed to look for a specific structure, such as a hierarchy, linear order, or a set of clusters.


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All News summaries for August 25, 2008

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