The Future of Data Science with Brian Wright | University of Virginia
概要
TLDRIn this episode of 'Edu Unlocked,' Dr. Brian Wright, associate professor at the University of Virginia’s School of Data Science, shares insights into the evolving field of data science and its educational implications. He elaborates on UVA’s groundbreaking approach, emphasizing a well-rounded curriculum based on a "four-plus-one" model addressing ethics, design, systems, analytics, and practical application. Dr. Wright, with experience in both academia and industry, discusses transitioning to data science from non-technical backgrounds, leveraging online resources, and the importance of blending industry dynamics with academic learning. The conversation also delves into the impact of large language models (LLMs) and AI in education, emphasizing their benefits and limitations. Students, educators, and administrators can gain valuable advice on applying data science in various domains and navigating fast-changing technological landscapes. Dr. Wright candidly discusses the importance of passion, adaptability, and staying ahead by learning new tools and techniques. He encourages open-minded learning to remain relevant in the workforce. The future of AI, personalization in education, and career adaptability are key themes explored throughout.
収穫
- 🎓 Data science is foundational for the 21st century and transcends various industries.
- 💻 Transitioning into technology fields is feasible even without a technical background.
- 📚 UVA’s data science program emphasizes ethics, design, systems, analytics, and practice.
- 🔍 Large language models (LLMs) bring new opportunities but have limitations like brittleness.
- 🧑🏫 Faculty can leverage industry partnerships and younger colleagues to stay relevant.
- 🤖 AI tools are already integrated into education but need human oversight for quality.
- 🌐 Blurring lines between academia and the workforce improves relevancy and practicality.
- 🚀 Data science skills can lead to diverse career opportunities, from public health to law.
- 🧠 Human intuition remains irreplaceable even as AI advances.
- ⚡ The pace of technological change demands continuous learning and adaptability.
タイムライン
- 00:00:00 - 00:05:00
Episode introduction with Dr. Brian Wright, a key figure in data science education, is given a warm welcome. Dr. Wright, an Associate Professor at the University of Virginia, is recognized for shaping data science programs and contributing to curriculum development, even involving George Washington University and the Department of Defense. The discussion is set to explore his impact and thought process on evolving data science education.
- 00:05:00 - 00:10:00
Dr. Wright discusses the founding of the first Data Science School at the University of Virginia in 2019. With limited faculty, they created a curriculum based on a 'four plus one' model emphasizing ethics, design, systems, analytics, and practice of data science. Unlike others, this balanced model aimed to cover all areas essential for graduates, impactful due to their pioneering status as the first standalone school.
- 00:10:00 - 00:15:00
The program initially focused on building structures like administration and student services before rapidly expanding faculty, aiming to hire twelve more this year. Dr. Wright shares his career journey, highlighting his mission-driven approach and transition from working with the Department of Defense to joining academia for better dynamic impact.
- 00:15:00 - 00:20:00
Continued career reflection leads to the foundation of a research institute focusing on statistics at the University of Tennessee and further career developments at George Washington University. This highlights Dr. Wright's evolution in the field, embracing teaching roles, driven by opportunities rather than planned transitions.
- 00:20:00 - 00:25:00
Dr. Wright emphasizes the feasibility of career transitions into data science, supported by accessible, high-quality non-academic courses and programs. As technology advances rapidly, he underscores the continuous learning necessary for staying relevant and informed about large language models, their applications, and potential.
- 00:25:00 - 00:30:00
Examines challenges in deploying large language models given their dynamic responses and potential risk factors. Despite these, Dr. Wright is optimistic about their role in solving customer service gaps, though he cautions against high-risk environments using these models extensively.
- 00:30:00 - 00:35:00
Dr. Wright advocates for foundational data science knowledge as essential and universally applicable across industries, preparing students for varied careers. He outlines the University of Virginia's data science program, offering concentrations in different fields to specialize and diversify graduates' skill sets.
- 00:35:00 - 00:41:15
Discusses the evolving role of intelligent agents and machine learning in education, highlighting their potential to reshape learning dynamics and interaction. Dr. Wright reflects on the future, expecting faster-paced innovation and adaptation to new tools and methodologies, reinforcing the importance of experience and intuition in data science.
マインドマップ
ビデオQ&A
Who is Dr. Brian Wright?
Dr. Brian Wright is an associate professor of Data Science at the University of Virginia and has helped design the data science curriculum there.
What is unique about UVA's School of Data Science?
It is one of the first dedicated data science schools in the US, focusing on a well-rounded four-plus-one model including ethics, design, systems, analytics, and practice.
Can people change careers to data science without a technical background?
Yes, according to Dr. Wright, individuals from non-technical fields such as music, history, and sociology can successfully transition into data science programs.
What advice does Dr. Wright give to students considering data science?
He suggests data science is a versatile foundation that opens opportunities in many domains, allowing students to tailor their learning to specific industries.
What are large language models (LLMs)?
LLMs are AI models capable of understanding and generating human-like text, used in applications such as chatbots and intelligent agents.
What changes are happening in the education-to-workforce connection?
Dr. Wright highlights the importance of blending academia with industry through partnerships, advisory boards, and adopting innovative technologies.
How can faculty stay updated with rapidly evolving technology?
Collaborating with younger faculty and building relationships with industry experts are key strategies outlined by Dr. Wright.
What role do ethics play in data science programs?
Ethics is one of the key pillars of UVA’s data science curriculum, ensuring students understand the societal implications of their work.
Can AI replace human intuition in professions like data science?
Dr. Wright argues that while AI can assist in processes and lower-level tasks, human intuition and experience remain crucial for solving complex problems.
How does UVA integrate technology, like AI, into its curriculum?
UVA uses intelligent agents, continuous learning tools, and emphasizes real-world applications to enhance its data science instruction.
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- 00:00:00so we have everybody from music and
- 00:00:01history and sociology liberal arts
- 00:00:03foreign language you know whatever it is
- 00:00:05those people come in and they do fine
- 00:00:06started from the beginning yeah they're
- 00:00:08very successful sometimes comeing with a
- 00:00:09clean slate is kind of an
- 00:00:11[Music]
- 00:00:16advantage hello everybody and welcome to
- 00:00:18another amazing episode of edu unlocked
- 00:00:22where we meet with inspirational leaders
- 00:00:24from our education leaders in enrollment
- 00:00:26leaders in technology leaders who are
- 00:00:28helping shape in institutions globally
- 00:00:31today we have another special guest with
- 00:00:33us uh somebody who's helped shape the
- 00:00:36world of data science and machine
- 00:00:38learning in some ways possible we have
- 00:00:41Dr Brian Wright with us who's the
- 00:00:42associate professor of data science at
- 00:00:45the University of Virginia's School of
- 00:00:47data science Dr Wright Welcome to our
- 00:00:50podcast all right yeah happy to be here
- 00:00:52it's a lot of pressure I hope I live up
- 00:00:53to the uh live up to that introduction
- 00:00:56thanks no well well there's more coming
- 00:00:58in terms of introduction
- 00:01:00preparation okay good yeah but you know
- 00:01:03I want to let our listeners know that uh
- 00:01:05Dr Wright is not just someone who who
- 00:01:09thinks data science but he also shapes
- 00:01:11he designs curriculum like he's helped
- 00:01:14shape the University's data science
- 00:01:16curriculum um and I want to talk about
- 00:01:18that a little bit what goes into your
- 00:01:20thought process right we'll talk about
- 00:01:22that because that's a field that keeps
- 00:01:24changing uh but other than um University
- 00:01:27of Virginia you've played a pivotal role
- 00:01:30also in the Masters in data science
- 00:01:32program at George Washington you've
- 00:01:35co-founded the data Science Institute
- 00:01:37there that's pretty amazing you've done
- 00:01:39some work for the Department of Defense
- 00:01:42and uh you hold a PhD in higher
- 00:01:45education Administration so you actually
- 00:01:47can you don't just think data science
- 00:01:50and and how those things um should
- 00:01:52operate for the for the workforce for
- 00:01:54students but you also um are you take an
- 00:01:58active role in administration and that's
- 00:02:00amazing uh would love to chat with you
- 00:02:02on that today great happy to do it yeah
- 00:02:04thanks again for thanks again for having
- 00:02:06me yeah fantastic forward to it yeah so
- 00:02:09so so talk to us uh Dr Wright about
- 00:02:12about the data science program at at
- 00:02:14Virginia like what's what's special
- 00:02:17about it and what what got you to design
- 00:02:20that program and what you said you
- 00:02:22thought were like your secret sauce you
- 00:02:24know that you oh yeah okay well well UVA
- 00:02:27data science School the school of data
- 00:02:29science was the first one in the country
- 00:02:31uh no big deal uh but it uh big deal as
- 00:02:35a result
- 00:02:36yeah humle break uh but as as a result
- 00:02:40of that uh it gave us a lot of avature
- 00:02:44to say to ourselves all right so if
- 00:02:46we're going to set a Line in the Sand
- 00:02:47here we're going to create this first
- 00:02:49school like what is what does data
- 00:02:51science mean to us like what does it
- 00:02:53actually represent in terms of the you
- 00:02:55know in terms of the the body of
- 00:02:57knowledge uh in terms of what we want to
- 00:02:59manifest inside of inside our programs
- 00:03:02and so that's the first thing we did and
- 00:03:04that was you know around
- 00:03:062019 which was just a small group of us
- 00:03:08I don't want to go back wait too much in
- 00:03:10the Wayback machine here but after I
- 00:03:11list GW and then came to UVA I mean we
- 00:03:14only had like four or five faculty I me
- 00:03:16it was a small group you know smaller
- 00:03:17than most departments it's still not
- 00:03:19super big now we have we have
- 00:03:2130 um but you know some of the early
- 00:03:24faculty that were here um Rafa zerado
- 00:03:27and Don Brown and myself and others John
- 00:03:30kopco we sat down and we said okay let's
- 00:03:33let's frame out the space and we came we
- 00:03:35came up with like a I don't want to get
- 00:03:36into details but we came up about like a
- 00:03:38four plus1 model which kind of like
- 00:03:40represents these different areas of the
- 00:03:42field uh and we design all our
- 00:03:44curriculum basically as using that as a
- 00:03:47as a framework um and so if there is
- 00:03:49secret sauce I mean that's probably it
- 00:03:52you know so the four spaces I mean
- 00:03:55generally it's kind of like value and
- 00:03:56ethics all right we have design which is
- 00:03:58about communicating data organizing
- 00:04:00designing data projects and then we have
- 00:04:02systems which is like all the
- 00:04:03engineering like devops like deployment
- 00:04:06also coding programming cloud computing
- 00:04:08and then analytics which is machine
- 00:04:09learning and then kind of at the middle
- 00:04:11is like the practice of data science and
- 00:04:12so a lot of these features were already
- 00:04:15present like in the market you know in
- 00:04:18terms of the way that data science
- 00:04:19programs were coming up but nobody
- 00:04:20really leaned into saying you know you
- 00:04:22need to have each of these in balance
- 00:04:24and in proportion to half like uh this
- 00:04:27what we want graduates to know so so
- 00:04:29that's that's what we did um which I
- 00:04:32think you couldn't really
- 00:04:34do uh unless you had you know kind of
- 00:04:37this space to do it like in your own
- 00:04:38school or like your own department and
- 00:04:40so we had to build all our own classes
- 00:04:41hire our own faculty and so it was a
- 00:04:44real luxury to be able to go through
- 00:04:46that and I'm guessing hiring faculty
- 00:04:48must have been tough because I mean
- 00:04:49we're talking First Data science program
- 00:04:51in the country like yeah that's right
- 00:04:54well well right so was the first school
- 00:04:56right so there's lots of programs out
- 00:04:58there but it was the first one was a
- 00:04:59inone school and yeah that's true yeah
- 00:05:02yeah and even for this year you know in
- 00:05:04the couple of year the first couple of
- 00:05:06years we hired we focused a lot on not
- 00:05:08hiring as much faculty but as much as
- 00:05:10building kind of like the actual
- 00:05:12administrative kind of organization
- 00:05:14right we needed everybody from HR to
- 00:05:17Communications to you know just um
- 00:05:20admissions you know student affairs like
- 00:05:22a lot of that stuff had to be in place
- 00:05:24so we did a bunch of that and then the
- 00:05:25last three years I'd say been we've just
- 00:05:27been pretty much it feels like a whole
- 00:05:28another job just hiring faculty all all
- 00:05:32the time we're searching for another 12
- 00:05:34this year which is a huge number yeah
- 00:05:36for a for for a school and we've done
- 00:05:38that pretty consistently year over year
- 00:05:39it's about that number yeah that's
- 00:05:41amazing what got you into this Dr R uh
- 00:05:45was this a plan all along or you
- 00:05:47stumbled on something and you said oh
- 00:05:49this this looks like a a less riskier
- 00:05:52path for me like talk to us a little bit
- 00:05:54about your career path yeah I don't know
- 00:05:56I it's got It's a Wandering Road I think
- 00:05:58like most people like I had I had ideals
- 00:06:02uh I think that drove my you know drove
- 00:06:05my journey you know I was always very
- 00:06:08you know I I wanted to work on something
- 00:06:09that was that I could put my heart into
- 00:06:11to be honest like I was like a bit of a
- 00:06:12mission focused and to be honest it's
- 00:06:14why I was like at the dod I mean it felt
- 00:06:17that way you know kind of working
- 00:06:18towards you know the the mission of the
- 00:06:21country and the dod was was great it
- 00:06:23ended up being um not a place where you
- 00:06:26could like dynamically improve like very
- 00:06:28fast and then it's kind of like typical
- 00:06:29of most places so I jumped and did
- 00:06:32Consulting um but I stayed in the
- 00:06:34federal government I was still in the
- 00:06:35was in the chairman of the joint tees
- 00:06:36for like three years and that was that
- 00:06:39was moving really fast and it was great
- 00:06:40and the Consulting side of it Lally
- 00:06:42allowed you to kind of build yourself up
- 00:06:45um but then over time it it it became
- 00:06:47like I was trying to get out of DC
- 00:06:49actually because of just like the pace
- 00:06:51of life and so I went back to my Alber
- 00:06:53monor I did everything at the University
- 00:06:55of
- 00:06:55Tennessee um and I I helped stand up a
- 00:06:59uh Research Institute in the business
- 00:07:00school there that was in the statistics
- 00:07:03and Logistics department and people know
- 00:07:06maybe some people do some people don't
- 00:07:07but you know Tennessee has one of the
- 00:07:09best Logistics programs in the country
- 00:07:10for a while was rate is rated number one
- 00:07:12and that's all about like kind of
- 00:07:14Applied statistics and so that's where
- 00:07:17like you know we started doing a ton of
- 00:07:18like applied statistical modeling you
- 00:07:20know we're using some machine learning
- 00:07:22algorithms all sponsored really from the
- 00:07:24Air Force because it had kind of like
- 00:07:26this flavor of like kind of a defense
- 00:07:28Institute
- 00:07:30and I did my PhD at night uh so I worked
- 00:07:32with faculty in those departments on
- 00:07:34research teams from economics and
- 00:07:36statistics during the day and then I was
- 00:07:38like doing PhD stuff at night and so
- 00:07:40that's where I really learned like all
- 00:07:41my data science chops you know I have an
- 00:07:43economics degree so I had like a
- 00:07:45foundation and these quantitative
- 00:07:46methods but the applied part of it like
- 00:07:48solving problems that's pretty much all
- 00:07:49we did like for for three years which
- 00:07:52was awesome um and then you get hooked
- 00:07:54on to it and then you're like okay
- 00:07:56instead of running a million rows on
- 00:07:58spreadsheets and then having stall on
- 00:08:00you you just uh you learn new methods of
- 00:08:03working on that data and then that's
- 00:08:05what that's right and it's right about
- 00:08:06the same time the market started going
- 00:08:08crazy so I was there in like 2010 you
- 00:08:11know 2011 get that right you know
- 00:08:14Harvard piece comes out it's a sexiest
- 00:08:16job in the 21st century to be
- 00:08:17statistician data scientist and then and
- 00:08:20then it just went nuts so I went I got
- 00:08:22married and then we went back to DC
- 00:08:24because that's where our families were
- 00:08:25from and uh so we started my wife and I
- 00:08:28we started our career there and I I
- 00:08:30wanted to stay in education so I got a
- 00:08:31job at GW and one of the first things
- 00:08:33they asked me to do was like help out
- 00:08:35with the data science program and build
- 00:08:36it out and I was like sure and so yeah
- 00:08:38absolutely we did so well I ended up
- 00:08:41going over being faculty there and then
- 00:08:42I've just been in it I've been in it
- 00:08:44ever since yeah that's amazing what's uh
- 00:08:46what's your so it's would you say there
- 00:08:48was a little bit of
- 00:08:50a career change along the way yeah I
- 00:08:54mean I I mean depending on the depending
- 00:08:56on the Fidelity there you know I might
- 00:08:58say that this is like my third or fourth
- 00:09:01career you know being a federal employee
- 00:09:03is much different than being a
- 00:09:04consultant even though I was working in
- 00:09:05the same market so it's kind of like a
- 00:09:07career shift but maybe not really okay
- 00:09:09and then um you know I was really a you
- 00:09:11know I was you know was working as a
- 00:09:13researcher pretty much primarily like
- 00:09:15when I was at Tennessee I was teaching
- 00:09:16some classes but not quite as much but
- 00:09:18when I got to GW it was it was like
- 00:09:20another kind of like a bit of a you know
- 00:09:22in the same Market but a change where I
- 00:09:24was really teaching you know kind of
- 00:09:26full-time you know a lot of teaching a
- 00:09:28lot of classes um which was which was
- 00:09:30different something I had not done in
- 00:09:31the past and that's that's really I mean
- 00:09:34that that part of it I just ended up
- 00:09:35loving you know so I just wanted to do
- 00:09:37that as much as possible how easy do you
- 00:09:39think it is for somebody who is in high
- 00:09:41Ed like working let's say in something
- 00:09:44in academics or or or other
- 00:09:46administrative roles to suddenly say
- 00:09:49yeah I'm going to look at technology I'm
- 00:09:51going to start thinking about business
- 00:09:53analytics or data science or things like
- 00:09:55that because that's the future it can
- 00:09:57probably make me a little more money
- 00:09:59like what's the what's your feedback
- 00:10:01there I think it's totally possible I
- 00:10:04mean I think it's more easier now than
- 00:10:05it kind of ever has been I mean there's
- 00:10:07so many I mean there's there's high
- 00:10:10quality like non- accredited like
- 00:10:12outside of school programs that you can
- 00:10:13take would get you a long way I mean
- 00:10:15like you know IBM like Google they have
- 00:10:17their own classes you know that you know
- 00:10:19they're they're good you know the stuff
- 00:10:21that's on corsera or you know edx like
- 00:10:25if you didn't want to go full Academic
- 00:10:26Program you just wanted to pick up some
- 00:10:27skills and apply it inside your job like
- 00:10:30it's and you make a hard argument that
- 00:10:33those are just as good as maybe some of
- 00:10:35the accredited programs nowadays I mean
- 00:10:37they're good um a lot of that stuff
- 00:10:39didn't wasn't even present really when I
- 00:10:41was when I was starting to pick up a
- 00:10:43bunch of this stuff exactly what I was
- 00:10:44gonna say is there's there's so much
- 00:10:46coming every time like you know we last
- 00:10:50time we spoke we talked about like llms
- 00:10:52and it's just right the person who knows
- 00:10:54the most about it is probably like has
- 00:10:57like two years or three years of
- 00:10:59knowledge
- 00:10:59on it yeah yeah that's totally fair I
- 00:11:03mean it the pace of the pace of
- 00:11:05Technology Innovation now is is I mean
- 00:11:08it's our job I mean in large I mean in
- 00:11:10large part our job to like try and stay
- 00:11:12up with like all these methods because
- 00:11:14as you're as you're researching and like
- 00:11:16creating projects or delivering
- 00:11:17curriculum in the classroom you want to
- 00:11:19stay right there but it is so much
- 00:11:21harder now even than it was just a
- 00:11:23couple of years ago I mean the pace of
- 00:11:25change is really fast um and so
- 00:11:28sometimes it's another Reon why you know
- 00:11:30some of the online platforms they may
- 00:11:31respond even quicker than we do in
- 00:11:33Academia but again you know I think it's
- 00:11:36it's totally possible to pick that up
- 00:11:37and I you know we have our own like
- 00:11:39large language model research group you
- 00:11:41know that I'm that I have an active
- 00:11:42learning lab so we're building
- 00:11:44intelligent agents and putting them in
- 00:11:45the classrooms and then trying to track
- 00:11:47and see how students are using them or
- 00:11:50how how to be honest how really brittle
- 00:11:52they are like how they hard they are to
- 00:11:54train um and fine-tune to make sure that
- 00:11:56you can get consistent results it's
- 00:11:58still I think it's still still an open
- 00:11:59question to be honest yeah and I was
- 00:12:03going to talk about that I mean you know
- 00:12:04the the the theme I think here is uh
- 00:12:07there there are listeners who are in
- 00:12:08highed who are looking for leadership
- 00:12:11roles but who're also looking for
- 00:12:12Transitions and what should be the what
- 00:12:14should they be doing next so I think
- 00:12:16sure you know that that definitely helps
- 00:12:18learning from you on uh just based on
- 00:12:22your career trajectory that it's if you
- 00:12:24want to switch to something that you
- 00:12:26know that's in technology and you've not
- 00:12:27done it before ever it does doesn't mean
- 00:12:29you know you have to have had a
- 00:12:31bachelor's in computer science at least
- 00:12:33no you're just like these are things
- 00:12:35today you can learn even on the internet
- 00:12:37yeah I mean to be clear I mean most of
- 00:12:38the students that are in our graduate
- 00:12:40level programs they don't they don't
- 00:12:41come from those backgrounds I mean there
- 00:12:42is there is something we can offer I
- 00:12:44mean our degree is kind of a career
- 00:12:46transition degree the one we offer here
- 00:12:47which is very typical of a lot of data
- 00:12:50science degrees and so we have everybody
- 00:12:52from music and history and sociology you
- 00:12:55know liberal arts foreign language you
- 00:12:57know whatever it is those people come in
- 00:12:58and they do fine you kind of start from
- 00:13:00the beginning yeah they're very
- 00:13:02successful sometimes sometimes comeing
- 00:13:05with a clean slate is kind of an
- 00:13:06advantage to be honest you know so way
- 00:13:09yeah you be Prejudice I mean you know
- 00:13:11for some of the people that come from
- 00:13:13stats or from you know computer science
- 00:13:15I mean sometimes it's hard have to kind
- 00:13:16of they have to translate what they've
- 00:13:19learned in the past to what we're
- 00:13:20showing them now that translation effect
- 00:13:22can take can take can take energy that
- 00:13:26is true that is yeah that's a very good
- 00:13:28point yeah yeah I mean I I did my
- 00:13:31bachelor's and Masters in biotech and
- 00:13:33I'm running a tech company now and we
- 00:13:36deal with machine learning and AI stuff
- 00:13:39all all day all night uh but I I I don't
- 00:13:43I didn't ever feel
- 00:13:45the there was a gap that you know I
- 00:13:47needed a a computer science degree or
- 00:13:49something to fill in there's so much you
- 00:13:51can learn just just by getting on the
- 00:13:53Internet it's crazy yeah so so so
- 00:13:56talking about llms now that we're on
- 00:13:58that topic that's one of like your
- 00:14:00favorite subjects uh you touched upon it
- 00:14:03last time you're very intrigued by where
- 00:14:05they're going uh so do you think we're
- 00:14:08ever going to have a Bank of America bot
- 00:14:11or booking.com bot where we actually
- 00:14:13don't have to say hey I want to talk to
- 00:14:15an agent you know I I was doing this
- 00:14:17work directly but through a colleague of
- 00:14:18mine who runs you know it's the head of
- 00:14:20an AI research you know group here
- 00:14:23they're deciding some of these and part
- 00:14:24of his job is just to break the large
- 00:14:26language models he's a red team you know
- 00:14:28his his research team is is the is
- 00:14:30basically the red team before go live
- 00:14:32you know so people will build prototypes
- 00:14:33they come to him and they they break
- 00:14:36them like a lot you know just through
- 00:14:38compression testing so you can just fire
- 00:14:40off basically train one AA bot to like
- 00:14:42attack the other one through a series of
- 00:14:44prompts right so it might be they're
- 00:14:45answering thousands of thousands of
- 00:14:47progressive questions but eventually
- 00:14:48that large language model gives you
- 00:14:50something it shouldn't you know it gives
- 00:14:51you like movie quote or it says hey put
- 00:14:53your money in Bitcoin you're like okay
- 00:14:55have to be careful you know so you know
- 00:14:58you can as many guard rails as you want
- 00:15:00to put in place you know that I think
- 00:15:02for especially for organizations that
- 00:15:04are like heavily risk averse like large
- 00:15:07lers models is a bad choice I mean they
- 00:15:09do something simpler like if there's a
- 00:15:10real problem there like they're losing
- 00:15:12customers because the chatbot just isn't
- 00:15:14authentic enough like okay that's
- 00:15:16usually not the case usually it's a
- 00:15:18feature not not actually a you know it's
- 00:15:20that derivative of the entire business
- 00:15:22model so then you then it's really a
- 00:15:24question of how much risk you want to
- 00:15:25put into this feature you know maybe
- 00:15:27maybe not much yeah but I think like um
- 00:15:31you know the the me the memory loss
- 00:15:33problem you know associated with like
- 00:15:35how quickly like they atrophy in terms
- 00:15:37of like their responses that are high
- 00:15:39quality over time is still a problem um
- 00:15:43you know rag distributions distilled
- 00:15:45large language models like controlling
- 00:15:47the you know the embedding spaces like
- 00:15:49these work like prompt Ed like all these
- 00:15:51things work they they're arbitres
- 00:15:53against that like problem but it's still
- 00:15:58an organic feature like it's still so
- 00:16:00you have to guard again so like it's
- 00:16:01still there and then and then you know
- 00:16:05you lose some of the niceties of like
- 00:16:07traditional you know word deac where
- 00:16:10it's like you know King to Queen is to
- 00:16:12Prince to princess that doesn't exist in
- 00:16:14large languish models so they have these
- 00:16:15empirical features that uh aren't there
- 00:16:19because of the size of them so they they
- 00:16:21you know the nature of the how quickly
- 00:16:24they they respond to prompts and stuff
- 00:16:25means that they have to kind of push
- 00:16:27everything out
- 00:16:29board and so the embedding spaces
- 00:16:31becomes kind of just on the surface so
- 00:16:34interesting so so talking about that I
- 00:16:36mean do you think you know like when
- 00:16:39when Wikipedia started we said oh my God
- 00:16:42it's going to be at some point the
- 00:16:43largest like Encyclopedia of information
- 00:16:46and everything and then they could never
- 00:16:49solve the problem of fake information on
- 00:16:51Wikipedia because I could launch a page
- 00:16:53on myself and write whatever I want uh
- 00:16:56and it's hard to get it peer reviewed or
- 00:16:59or or do that kind of stuff so do you
- 00:17:01think the fact that llms like chat GPT
- 00:17:04actually learn from all the information
- 00:17:06that's out there and and those so that
- 00:17:09whole challenge of hallucination which
- 00:17:11now they claim in the next version it's
- 00:17:13going to be completely gone but do you
- 00:17:15think all that is even possible
- 00:17:18considering that like so much of the
- 00:17:20information that it's learning from it's
- 00:17:22training data actually has non-factual
- 00:17:25information in it yeah it's it's weird
- 00:17:27because you can't I don't think you can
- 00:17:29think of large language models as a data
- 00:17:30store like I just don't think that's the
- 00:17:33way that you I think if you if you
- 00:17:34approach it that way you're destined for
- 00:17:35failure you know and I I mean the
- 00:17:37quality of like these AI generated
- 00:17:39search responses like on top of your
- 00:17:40browsers and stuff like they're kind of
- 00:17:42good but like is it better than just a
- 00:17:44traditional like I don't know
- 00:17:47vector-based keyword you know uh prompt
- 00:17:49I don't know
- 00:17:51so I uh I I think if we think of it as
- 00:17:55like may maybe an analogy is that you
- 00:17:57know we all we're all learning to read
- 00:17:59right you know and you become a
- 00:18:00proficient reader like at what age like
- 00:18:02a in maybe 10th or 11th grade maybe
- 00:18:04maybe onward after that I think we have
- 00:18:06to think of like these Foundation models
- 00:18:08as like proficient readers like they
- 00:18:10understand the they understand like uh
- 00:18:13you know language and they can respond
- 00:18:15to it but just like a 12th grader they
- 00:18:17don't know everything right and so like
- 00:18:20they're G you can't just just because
- 00:18:21you can read and write doesn't mean you
- 00:18:23have a capacity of knowledge and I mean
- 00:18:27maybe it's a loose analogy but if you it
- 00:18:29like that like a like a like a you know
- 00:18:32like an intelligent foundation with
- 00:18:34which you can then build something on
- 00:18:35top I think I think the the conversation
- 00:18:38works much better if you use it as
- 00:18:40simply a prompt recall type of I don't
- 00:18:42know to me that it doesn't work as well
- 00:18:45and I I that's why it works really well
- 00:18:46for like editing or like idea iteration
- 00:18:49or like outlines or summaries because
- 00:18:51you provided the information it needs it
- 00:18:53understands the language and it can give
- 00:18:54it back to you in a way that you want it
- 00:18:56to right which is an ideal use cas case
- 00:18:59as compared to building it into some
- 00:19:01application that must generate new
- 00:19:04information or timely information like
- 00:19:05you're destined for failure I mean even
- 00:19:07if it doesn't hallucinate like I get it
- 00:19:09but it doesn't understand meaning like
- 00:19:12it just doesn't like there's no meaning
- 00:19:13there as much as people want it to be if
- 00:19:15you look at them underneath the hood
- 00:19:18empirically I mean it just it doesn't it
- 00:19:20it uses this the distribution hypothesis
- 00:19:22right that words that are close together
- 00:19:23mean something and it does work but it
- 00:19:26doesn't mean that it understands the
- 00:19:27words that it's producing
- 00:19:29interest interesting thought there yeah
- 00:19:31I mean I'm I'm really looking forward to
- 00:19:33see where it can go because it seems to
- 00:19:36me like it has the ability to make you
- 00:19:39know like science we've had this in
- 00:19:42science fiction for a while where
- 00:19:43there's this assistant in your year all
- 00:19:46the time who knows so much about you and
- 00:19:49uh and it kind of felt when CH GPT
- 00:19:51launched the latest like
- 00:19:5340 I've been using it a lot like when
- 00:19:56I'm walking my dog I'm talking to it
- 00:19:57just to kind of see
- 00:19:59it's and it's actually kind of amazing
- 00:20:03like where it's where it's at right yeah
- 00:20:06no I don't disagree it is a a total
- 00:20:08technology breakthrough like I'm I'm I'm
- 00:20:10sayin on the future you know I think
- 00:20:12they're going to be you know interesting
- 00:20:15I it I think the multimodal aspect of it
- 00:20:18I think is going to be I think there's a
- 00:20:20lot left to know about what how the
- 00:20:23combination of voice and image and sound
- 00:20:25and text together like those things I
- 00:20:27think that's a very interesting
- 00:20:30Prospect I mean the continuously
- 00:20:32continuous learning aspect of it is
- 00:20:34really cool too that you can create AI
- 00:20:36agents on top of the models and they
- 00:20:38just continue to learn over time I think
- 00:20:40that's a good one almost like an intern
- 00:20:42you know you embed them into your team
- 00:20:44and it gets to know you more and more
- 00:20:46because it understands language you can
- 00:20:47speak to it in a Common
- 00:20:49Language and so and there's been some
- 00:20:52interesting you know back and
- 00:20:54discussions I would say and people that
- 00:20:56are closer to this as it relates to like
- 00:20:58low dens it languages languages where
- 00:21:00there's not a lot of text like how to
- 00:21:02train agents using English to translate
- 00:21:05and basically you relying on Experts to
- 00:21:07kind of continuously have conversations
- 00:21:09over time and that creates a database
- 00:21:12that actually can be used as a as more
- 00:21:14of a repository for training and what
- 00:21:16that looks like so I think there's yeah
- 00:21:19we're certainly just getting started
- 00:21:20right I mean it's like you said you know
- 00:21:22the an expert might be four or five
- 00:21:25years you know worth of experience or
- 00:21:27something so we're just getting started
- 00:21:29and it's it's cool the progress is
- 00:21:30making and it seems like every every
- 00:21:32week There's a new paper with a new
- 00:21:34breakthrough you know that that that
- 00:21:36allows you to think about these things
- 00:21:37differently so AB absolutely yeah and uh
- 00:21:40and you know coming to students so we
- 00:21:42have some of our listeners are students
- 00:21:45uh who who always want to think about uh
- 00:21:48whether they're on the right track right
- 00:21:49every student when we were students we
- 00:21:51were paranoid to I might take picking
- 00:21:53the right course the right degree will I
- 00:21:55get the right job yeah you you seem to
- 00:21:58have been someone who's adapted to
- 00:22:01Changing Times right you like you moved
- 00:22:03into data science you've now got into
- 00:22:05like trying to understand llms that's
- 00:22:07the newest thing and you're like oh I'm
- 00:22:09intrigued and you're comparing it to
- 00:22:10Legacy systems like oh yeah you know
- 00:22:13this is a word to I love it uh in terms
- 00:22:16of students who are thinking about you
- 00:22:19know what whether data science is right
- 00:22:21it kind of feels like that you know that
- 00:22:24article that came out about data science
- 00:22:25being the number one job no more like
- 00:22:28stands true now there's newer things
- 00:22:31what what trajectory do you see um uh
- 00:22:34the world progressing in and what would
- 00:22:36be your suggestion and advice to those
- 00:22:39students who are starting out well again
- 00:22:41you know I I'll say this from I am of
- 00:22:44course bias but I I I think that the way
- 00:22:48that we've positioned our our
- 00:22:49undergraduate degree and we've
- 00:22:51advertised and talked about it is that
- 00:22:52it's a it's a it's a liberal arts degree
- 00:22:55for the data age right it's not a
- 00:22:56liberal arts degree but you can think of
- 00:22:58it as like you know a foundational
- 00:23:01knowledge for the 21st century I mean uh
- 00:23:04computer science should make the
- 00:23:05argument it's same you know their their
- 00:23:07advant their advantage is there uh for
- 00:23:11traditional kind of software development
- 00:23:12skills are always going to be kind of
- 00:23:14you know present but the the really
- 00:23:16interesting part about about the data
- 00:23:19science aspect of it this is true of of
- 00:23:21other fields as well is that you can
- 00:23:23take those skills and then go into so
- 00:23:26basically every Market ver right or
- 00:23:29every kind of area and then that could
- 00:23:31be a whole career you know the way you
- 00:23:34think about it just learning and
- 00:23:35understanding how they use data in that
- 00:23:37particular space the methodologies and
- 00:23:39the me and the techniques totally
- 00:23:41translate right but it's the field that
- 00:23:44can make the difference and it yeah so
- 00:23:46to me I I I just I can't I can't see
- 00:23:50getting a data science degree as as
- 00:23:52being a bad choice the way I think of it
- 00:23:53is like now especially with like the
- 00:23:55knowledge economy and like you know with
- 00:23:58the typ typical working kind of you know
- 00:24:00education level is is that you think of
- 00:24:02yourself as getting this like
- 00:24:04well-rounded you know kind of foundation
- 00:24:06in data science skills right which
- 00:24:08includes like you know lots of things
- 00:24:10that are heavily marketable which can
- 00:24:12allow you to go right into the market
- 00:24:14but then you can also think about well
- 00:24:15what domain area could I bolt on top of
- 00:24:18this like maybe in the future like in
- 00:24:20public health or in you know who knows
- 00:24:23what in GIS or in finance or whatever
- 00:24:26and so you know there's ways where it
- 00:24:28allows you to or law I mean we have a
- 00:24:30ton of we have a ton of students that
- 00:24:32are very interested in going into law
- 00:24:34and the the justice department last year
- 00:24:36changed their or was a year before they
- 00:24:39changed their like summer internship
- 00:24:40program where they weren't hiring
- 00:24:42pre-law or economics they were only
- 00:24:44hiring data analysts which was like a
- 00:24:45big demand signal for like where they
- 00:24:47thought the field was going to go so
- 00:24:48they're bringing in all these data
- 00:24:49analyst Majors into the justice
- 00:24:52department to help them manage their you
- 00:24:54know their projects and so I I think of
- 00:24:57it as that way it's just like a you just
- 00:24:59can't miss kind of foundation and then
- 00:25:02you can make the choice about where you
- 00:25:03want to go and that the last part I'll
- 00:25:04say is that we actually built that into
- 00:25:07the degree so we have we have nine
- 00:25:08concentrations in different areas
- 00:25:10everything from public policy and
- 00:25:11Leadership from economics to accounting
- 00:25:13to Public Public Health Neuroscience
- 00:25:17astrophysics like we have all of these
- 00:25:19concentrations that are part of the
- 00:25:21degree that the students once they get
- 00:25:22through our core then they just jump in
- 00:25:24to a concentration may be do many of
- 00:25:27them which is really cool you you're
- 00:25:28part of the data science program and
- 00:25:30then you can concentrate in Neuroscience
- 00:25:32when then you're learning more about
- 00:25:34clinical data CL resarch data all all of
- 00:25:38that kind of stuff yeah that's exactly
- 00:25:40right yeah and then the idea is that um
- 00:25:42and this was designed by The Faculty
- 00:25:44from those departments is that they
- 00:25:45wanted students to take a few of the
- 00:25:47courses because they're going to come
- 00:25:48with these data science machine learning
- 00:25:50skills take a few entry level courses so
- 00:25:52they'll be
- 00:25:53conversational in that field and then
- 00:25:56they can take them and put them into
- 00:25:57their lab groups so that's a combination
- 00:25:59of like this basic understanding of the
- 00:26:00field and then also like two and a half
- 00:26:03years of data you know curriculum it'll
- 00:26:06be pretty valuable yeah I love it yeah
- 00:26:09it's amazing and you know I was I was
- 00:26:11expecting you you would say that because
- 00:26:13I I do agree and I feel the same way as
- 00:26:16I mean even when you're thinking machine
- 00:26:18learning AI Core data science skills
- 00:26:21always are of prime importance uh yeah
- 00:26:24yeah I mean there's there's a lot of
- 00:26:26abstraction that you know companies like
- 00:26:28AWS and Google cloud and all of them are
- 00:26:30doing where now you can take all of your
- 00:26:33data and just you know magically like
- 00:26:34just bump it against a model and it it
- 00:26:37spits back some result but understanding
- 00:26:41the core of that understanding how data
- 00:26:43actually works uh yeah that's that's
- 00:26:45that's super important so you know we're
- 00:26:47always looking for data science uh
- 00:26:49graduates uh still even if we're hiring
- 00:26:52machine learning Engineers or anybody
- 00:26:54else so so this is good um yeah well let
- 00:26:57me know I got a I got a small Army
- 00:26:58they're all coming out but yeah I uh
- 00:27:00I'll let you help me make the pick
- 00:27:02that'll make my interview process easy
- 00:27:05there you go I'm happy to do that yeah I
- 00:27:07think it's I think it's fun and then the
- 00:27:09nice nice part about AR degrees and many
- 00:27:10of the other ones is that it really does
- 00:27:12Center on like this you know on solving
- 00:27:14problems you know so it's like the thing
- 00:27:16that the students we try and give them
- 00:27:19over and over again is this like
- 00:27:20intuition about the way things are going
- 00:27:23to work out like you can develop
- 00:27:25intuition through like practice over
- 00:27:27time
- 00:27:28and so even you know people that are
- 00:27:30just like jumping their data into Google
- 00:27:32spreadsheets or into some type of AI
- 00:27:34cloud system like the hard part is like
- 00:27:36where do those instincts get developed
- 00:27:38that help facilitate like how how they
- 00:27:40should use those results and it ends up
- 00:27:42and even there's like hard quantitative
- 00:27:45people you know typically the people
- 00:27:47that are best at their jobs are the ones
- 00:27:48that are like can see the mistakes
- 00:27:51coming you know and that's because they
- 00:27:52made them before you know and so that
- 00:27:55that part of it is is tough and it takes
- 00:27:57a little while to get there for that but
- 00:27:59usually that's the thing that puts
- 00:28:01people over top is just kind of this
- 00:28:03General experience and that's we're
- 00:28:04hoping to get like with the
- 00:28:05concentration so they can kind of do
- 00:28:06more projects and develop that that
- 00:28:08muscle a bit yeah but do you think like
- 00:28:11a decade a few decades from now let's
- 00:28:14say we will lose that intuition around
- 00:28:18learning around data because now that
- 00:28:20we're developing all these you know
- 00:28:23large machine learning models that can
- 00:28:25do so much of the thinking themselves I
- 00:28:27mean now you
- 00:28:28machines writing code they can write an
- 00:28:30entire piece of software themselves uh
- 00:28:34how how do you think that's going to
- 00:28:37shape us as humans who think and you
- 00:28:39know what does the data science program
- 00:28:42become 20 years from now well 20 years
- 00:28:45is hard because it's like you know I
- 00:28:47don't know you know I the way the
- 00:28:49technology is moving now like no no one
- 00:28:52no one can predict you know like what's
- 00:28:54going to happen you know but there are
- 00:28:56these you know
- 00:28:58you know what we do know like if you
- 00:29:00consider trend lines the way things are
- 00:29:02going like the emphasis in the need and
- 00:29:04the way that companies across the
- 00:29:06Spectrum are using and leveraging data
- 00:29:08as like a just normative strategic
- 00:29:10advantage or strategic like requirement
- 00:29:13keeps going up like if you're not doing
- 00:29:15that then you're Le you're gonna you're
- 00:29:17going to have market failure right I
- 00:29:18mean it just the advantage of being able
- 00:29:20to do that is so important that that
- 00:29:23demand doesn't feel like it's going
- 00:29:25doesn't feel like it's going anywhere
- 00:29:26now I do think like the a automation is
- 00:29:29going to be definitely be like a real
- 00:29:31thing you know and I a lot of the code
- 00:29:34production like again it it's compared
- 00:29:36to and not
- 00:29:38to anyway it's compared to someone
- 00:29:40that's just strictly like you said
- 00:29:41developing pure sweets of pure um
- 00:29:44scripts of software for deployment you
- 00:29:46know data data scientists you kind of
- 00:29:48hacky coders you know because the idea
- 00:29:50is like we're not necessarily developing
- 00:29:52a full St like a full standup piece of
- 00:29:55software or leveraging the tools in
- 00:29:57order to be able to Sol some problem you
- 00:29:59know and to a certain extent if like
- 00:30:00that automation of that like getting to
- 00:30:02the point where you can iterate like
- 00:30:04discover iterate discover iterate
- 00:30:06discover gets easier then that's great
- 00:30:08you know you're you're moving you know
- 00:30:10from a typewriter to a word processor
- 00:30:12like and further up and we already embed
- 00:30:15you know all the you know the the AI
- 00:30:17machines into the you know into into our
- 00:30:21courses you know it's almost impossible
- 00:30:22not to especially if you're using like
- 00:30:24vs code you know where it's just like
- 00:30:26organically embedded
- 00:30:28uh co-pilot is just there and it works
- 00:30:31really well and so the hard part about
- 00:30:34that at least in our experience I think
- 00:30:36I don't know and this is a
- 00:30:37generalization but once you get over a
- 00:30:38certain amount of lines in the code at
- 00:30:40least relative to the things that we're
- 00:30:42doing it the code generator starts to
- 00:30:44kind of break down and so in some ways
- 00:30:47like what it demands that you do is
- 00:30:50break down your problem into smaller
- 00:30:52pieces and then solve each piece and if
- 00:30:54the code generator is creating you code
- 00:30:56for that little piece
- 00:30:58you that's fine I mean I I you know to
- 00:31:01me I don't think it really matters
- 00:31:02you're GNA be exposed to code so much in
- 00:31:04doing it like it'd be a you don't almost
- 00:31:06have to ignore it not to really
- 00:31:07understand it and so in some ways it
- 00:31:10almost encourages students to think more
- 00:31:13strategically about the things they're
- 00:31:15doing as compared to usually the
- 00:31:17instinct is to just jump in and start
- 00:31:19coding right away without really
- 00:31:21thinking about what are the things you
- 00:31:22need to solve in what order and because
- 00:31:25the limitations you know kind of this is
- 00:31:27not always true but because of the
- 00:31:29limitations are some of the things that
- 00:31:30the Google with the co-pilot can do it
- 00:31:33actually sometimes helps you know
- 00:31:35because they have to stop and be like
- 00:31:36okay this is too much script like I
- 00:31:37don't really understand what's going on
- 00:31:39here they have to go back create smaller
- 00:31:41problems and solve those and then move
- 00:31:43to the next which is what exactly what
- 00:31:45we want them to do you know is that
- 00:31:47iteration is the is the point yeah so I
- 00:31:50don't know 20 years from now I can't
- 00:31:51answer I don't know I'll probably you
- 00:31:53know yeah it's at this point it's hard
- 00:31:55to answer what what's going to happen
- 00:31:56three years from now it's that's right
- 00:31:58three months I don't know I don't know
- 00:32:00yeah it's uh it's crazy but I I do agree
- 00:32:04with you I think that 100% like whatever
- 00:32:07we're doing now is not what we'll be
- 00:32:09doing like even a few years from now
- 00:32:11things will change so fast I'm sure of
- 00:32:13it um which is part of the reason I I
- 00:32:15like the field so much because I just
- 00:32:18it's a real challenge I mean if you want
- 00:32:20to stay in it you really do I mean if
- 00:32:22you step out of that stream even for a
- 00:32:23little while like the cost is expensive
- 00:32:25to get back up yeah can get irrelevant
- 00:32:30pretty quickly if you're you go on a
- 00:32:33vacation for a couple of months and
- 00:32:35you're at this point come back sorry
- 00:32:38you've been replaced like oh uh yeah I I
- 00:32:42I like I said I think you know some of
- 00:32:43these things like um experience and
- 00:32:45intuition really do like that becomes
- 00:32:48like but if you're not using the latest
- 00:32:49tools to drive that then that that's
- 00:32:51also a problem bringing all that
- 00:32:53together you speak about blurring the
- 00:32:55lines between institution and the
- 00:32:58workforce yeah right and that's what
- 00:33:00that's what you're aiming to do with the
- 00:33:02program there you're you're looking at
- 00:33:04the latest greatest Technologies you're
- 00:33:05working on llm so uh how successful do
- 00:33:10you think you've you are at being able
- 00:33:13to blur that line because that's
- 00:33:15something that a lot of Institutions are
- 00:33:17in in the hunt for right and it's just
- 00:33:19hard for them to cope up with the pace
- 00:33:21of Technology pace of the industry I I
- 00:33:24will say it's a challenge uh and I think
- 00:33:26there's some cultural stuff around what
- 00:33:28it means to be a faculty member that
- 00:33:29makes it hard um because there there are
- 00:33:32things about uh you know being a kind of
- 00:33:36uh a more seasoned faculty member that
- 00:33:39uh that are normalized you know that
- 00:33:41were in our jobs for a long time you
- 00:33:43know that the experience plays but
- 00:33:45having about again being being able to
- 00:33:47hire so many people in the school we
- 00:33:49have a ton of younger faculty and you
- 00:33:52know the nice part about that is that
- 00:33:54often they they teach up you know if you
- 00:33:56have a community where you know
- 00:33:58someone's been here for a while they're
- 00:33:59really good at a certain thing but like
- 00:34:00you said maybe they stepped out of the
- 00:34:01stream for a little bit like we can
- 00:34:04organically at least right now because
- 00:34:06of the Youth of the school like
- 00:34:08cross-pollinate that in a pretty pretty
- 00:34:10healthy way you know like from my
- 00:34:12experience this is like the best way to
- 00:34:13do your research program to like teach
- 00:34:15in a class like fundamentals and then it
- 00:34:17goes the other way and they're like well
- 00:34:18I'm using this really Innovative way
- 00:34:20this technique this tool this approach
- 00:34:22that maybe you hadn't thought about
- 00:34:23because you've been using you know our
- 00:34:25studio for the last 15 years so like it
- 00:34:27it's nice so it like kind of it evolves
- 00:34:30both ways I we also try and like
- 00:34:32whatever possible like the motto of the
- 00:34:34school is like the school Without Walls
- 00:34:36to try and bring industry in because
- 00:34:39it's not if you accept the reality that
- 00:34:41industry is going to be ahead of you and
- 00:34:42they probably will they almost at least
- 00:34:45in data science I it's see I don't see a
- 00:34:47Frontier where they're not like at least
- 00:34:50equal or running ahead just given how
- 00:34:52fast they can move um and try and
- 00:34:55leverage that not as a weakness but as
- 00:34:57like asset you know that you have this
- 00:34:59population of people out there that you
- 00:35:00know maybe they graduated from UVA
- 00:35:02they're really into data science you
- 00:35:03know they want a space to work they like
- 00:35:05being around students like just own that
- 00:35:07and bring it in I think a lot of schools
- 00:35:09are doing that and we're we're doing
- 00:35:11that too so we you know we have we have
- 00:35:13a I have a a a group of of just like
- 00:35:15pure data scientists like three or four
- 00:35:17years out of school or or less that are
- 00:35:20that are our curriculum Advisory Group
- 00:35:22that advise the undergraduate program so
- 00:35:24they're either graduate from our program
- 00:35:25or just colleagues I've met that are
- 00:35:28that are you know just they're they're
- 00:35:30they're keyboard you know they're
- 00:35:31they're doing the work you know and
- 00:35:32that's the level that you want you know
- 00:35:34to like really understand like what is
- 00:35:36the latest thing and so I bring them in
- 00:35:39every you know every semester and just
- 00:35:41ask questions like where where are we at
- 00:35:43you know is are we keeping up and it
- 00:35:45helps so yeah not not meaning to be
- 00:35:50controversial here but oh yeah would you
- 00:35:53would you rather prefer
- 00:35:57dealing with a human or a
- 00:36:02machine and would would that preference
- 00:36:05change based on certain things you want
- 00:36:07to do achieve yeah uh where you at with
- 00:36:11that that's a good question so it
- 00:36:14certainly depends on the context you
- 00:36:17know that there are there are certain
- 00:36:18things where if you just need an answer
- 00:36:20fast I mean geez so much easier just to
- 00:36:22have a nice machine that could search
- 00:36:23and bring that answer for you instead of
- 00:36:25having to rely on humans to respond or
- 00:36:27pinging being or whatever like social
- 00:36:29dynamics happen to be present right you
- 00:36:31know if things are complicated if there
- 00:36:33if there is history involved and there
- 00:36:35are personalities and all and of course
- 00:36:37it's better you know to have you know
- 00:36:39humans there as much as possible I think
- 00:36:41the complexity of any situation you know
- 00:36:44kind of dictates like where you where
- 00:36:45you fall on that I I will say like we're
- 00:36:48we're like um you know we're working on
- 00:36:51the an intelligent uh agent to embed and
- 00:36:53I've done it in other classes but into
- 00:36:55our machine introduction to machine
- 00:36:56learning class as a as a as almost like
- 00:37:00a just like a you know a study a study
- 00:37:03buddy or like a tutor or like you know a
- 00:37:05reference uh reference agent like all
- 00:37:07those things like not not one that'll
- 00:37:09like generate questions for you and like
- 00:37:11you can you can rep on it but one will
- 00:37:13be like okay that's located in lab seven
- 00:37:16and also by the way it's in chapter
- 00:37:18three of the book that Brian recommended
- 00:37:19like that like tailor tourus a conent in
- 00:37:21our
- 00:37:22class and part of that project um is
- 00:37:25what we're exploring is like embedding
- 00:37:27that agent like how does that change
- 00:37:29like the Dynamics associated with just
- 00:37:31the interaction between like student ta
- 00:37:35and teacher like in this in this what
- 00:37:39you can think of it is like in a
- 00:37:40traditional kind of model where you have
- 00:37:42like your like um you know on Prem like
- 00:37:47bought it system which is like
- 00:37:49Blackboard or canvas or whatever so
- 00:37:51there's that so they interact with that
- 00:37:53and email is part of that so there's a
- 00:37:54technology layer that's on the outside
- 00:37:56but inside the team
- 00:37:58you know there's these natural
- 00:37:59interactions that that typically occur
- 00:38:01between like professor and student and
- 00:38:04ta so what happens when you drop an
- 00:38:06intelligent agent in there like do they
- 00:38:08leverage that more like do they leverage
- 00:38:10it between hours of 10 and you know 3:00
- 00:38:13a.m when I'm not going to answer emails
- 00:38:15right but they can do that because that
- 00:38:16might be when they study you know I
- 00:38:18don't know exactly yeah and then how
- 00:38:20does it work when they're just in a team
- 00:38:22by themselves like work because we do
- 00:38:23everything's Active Learning right so
- 00:38:24they're like a team do they pull up the
- 00:38:26agent as a reference point to go back
- 00:38:28and forth about it so I'm I'm interested
- 00:38:31in the quality of the agent responses
- 00:38:33like that that that's an important part
- 00:38:34of it but the more interesting part I
- 00:38:36think like I think that we can solve
- 00:38:38that problem is like how it actually
- 00:38:39changes the Dynamics in the classroom in
- 00:38:43these like
- 00:38:44microcosm uh little little teams and the
- 00:38:47the communications between the between
- 00:38:49the the different players so I think
- 00:38:51that part of it kind of gets to where
- 00:38:52you're like what they might some
- 00:38:54students that might totally prefer not
- 00:38:55to talk to the teacher for the TA right
- 00:38:58they go straight to the straight to the
- 00:39:00agent why not it might be more efficient
- 00:39:01like you said all the reasons I was you
- 00:39:03know I was very intrigued at the latest
- 00:39:05uh Tesla event where they were showing
- 00:39:08those Robo taxis but then there were a
- 00:39:10bunch of like humanoid machines that
- 00:39:13walked out and I was like bluring the
- 00:39:17lines between a machine and a human it
- 00:39:19was very very interesting for me to see
- 00:39:22I didn't expect that in 2024 but that
- 00:39:24was interesting so you know the pace of
- 00:39:26just even blurring the lines between a
- 00:39:28human and machine like once we get to a
- 00:39:31point where you're talking to a machine
- 00:39:32but you cannot really identify whether
- 00:39:34it's a machine or a human we're kind of
- 00:39:36close to that I feel yeah that's the
- 00:39:39Turning test right you just can't tell
- 00:39:40the difference and so yeah I I uh agree
- 00:39:44yeah so we'll see and then it's if if
- 00:39:46you know or don't know like that's a
- 00:39:47that is a condition but if you know do
- 00:39:50you make the same choices like that's
- 00:39:52also a condition like worth exploring
- 00:39:54like it's interesting to see and there's
- 00:39:55a bunch of you know then it gets into
- 00:39:57you know trustworthy Ai and like how you
- 00:39:59build explainable systems or trustworthy
- 00:40:01systems that people can rely on things
- 00:40:03like that and that that that's a field
- 00:40:05that's going to grow and grow
- 00:40:06exponentially certainly amazing well Dr
- 00:40:09Wright thank you so much for sharing all
- 00:40:12that information I'm hoping this will be
- 00:40:15helpful to students who are thinking
- 00:40:16about the future this will be helpful to
- 00:40:18faculty and and administrators who are
- 00:40:20thinking about you know hey I want I
- 00:40:22want to get a flavor of technology in my
- 00:40:24life CU you know everybody is out there
- 00:40:26doing technology and with all these llms
- 00:40:28and Ai and machine learning I'm kind of
- 00:40:31left out so I think you're you're you're
- 00:40:33like a Guiding Light to to those kind of
- 00:40:35people in terms of you know getting in
- 00:40:37that direction so thank you so much for
- 00:40:39sharing all those insights yeah happy to
- 00:40:43do it it was a lot of fun and uh yeah if
- 00:40:45anybody wants to reach out or has
- 00:40:46questions feel free to just uh shoot me
- 00:40:49an email if they want it's Brian Wright
- 00:40:51virginia.edu I'm always happy to chat or
- 00:40:54talk if people uh want some advice
- 00:40:56amazing thank you so much I will
- 00:40:58actually we'll make sure we add that
- 00:40:59email to our description and people can
- 00:41:01reach out so that will help but but
- 00:41:04thank you and thank you to our listeners
- 00:41:06for joining another episode of edu
- 00:41:08unlocked with me Ashish Fernando and our
- 00:41:10special guest for today Dr Brian Wright
- 00:41:12from UVA thank you everybody
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