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On scientific understanding with artificial intelligence

Authors :
Krenn, Mario
Pollice, Robert
Guo, Si Yue
Aldeghi, Matteo
Cervera-Lierta, Alba
Friederich, Pascal
Gomes, Gabriel dos Passos
Häse, Florian
Jinich, Adrian
Nigam, AkshatKumar
Yao, Zhenpeng
Aspuru-Guzik, Alán
Source :
Nature Review Physics 4, 761 (2022)
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Imagine an oracle that correctly predicts the outcome of every particle physics experiment, the products of every chemical reaction, or the function of every protein. Such an oracle would revolutionize science and technology as we know them. However, as scientists, we would not be satisfied with the oracle itself. We want more. We want to comprehend how the oracle conceived these predictions. This feat, denoted as scientific understanding, has frequently been recognized as the essential aim of science. Now, the ever-growing power of computers and artificial intelligence poses one ultimate question: How can advanced artificial systems contribute to scientific understanding or achieve it autonomously? We are convinced that this is not a mere technical question but lies at the core of science. Therefore, here we set out to answer where we are and where we can go from here. We first seek advice from the philosophy of science to understand scientific understanding. Then we review the current state of the art, both from literature and by collecting dozens of anecdotes from scientists about how they acquired new conceptual understanding with the help of computers. Those combined insights help us to define three dimensions of android-assisted scientific understanding: The android as a I) computational microscope, II) resource of inspiration and the ultimate, not yet existent III) agent of understanding. For each dimension, we explain new avenues to push beyond the status quo and unleash the full power of artificial intelligence's contribution to the central aim of science. We hope our perspective inspires and focuses research towards androids that get new scientific understanding and ultimately bring us closer to true artificial scientists.<br />Comment: 13 pages, 3 figures, comments welcome!

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
Nature Review Physics 4, 761 (2022)
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2204.01467
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s42254-022-00518-3