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B1 中级 英语 15:11 Educational

Bayes theorem, the geometry of changing beliefs

3Blue1Brown · 5,628,035 次观看 · 添加于 3 周前

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00:00

The goal is for you to come away from this video understanding one

00:03

of the most important formulas in all of probability, Bayes' theorem.

00:07

This formula is central to scientific discovery,

00:10

it's a core tool in machine learning and AI, and it's even been used for treasure

00:14

hunting, when in the 1980s a small team led by Tommy Thompson,

00:18

and I'm not making up that name, used Bayesian search tactics to help uncover a

00:23

ship that had sunk a century and a half earlier,

00:25

and the ship was carrying what in today's terms amounts to $700 million worth of gold.

00:31

So it's a formula worth understanding, but of course there

00:34

are multiple different levels of possible understanding.

00:37

At the simplest there's just knowing what each one of the parts means,

00:40

so that you can plug in numbers.

00:42

Then there's understanding why it's true, and later I'm going to show you a

00:46

certain diagram that's helpful for rediscovering this formula on the fly as needed.

00:51

But maybe the most important level is being able to recognize when you need to use it.

00:55

And with the goal of gaining a deeper understanding,

00:58

you and I are going to tackle these in reverse order.

01:01

So before dissecting the formula or explaining the visual that makes it obvious,

01:04

I'd like to tell you about a man named Steve.

01:07

Listen carefully now.

01:12

Steve is very shy and withdrawn, invariably helpful but

01:15

with very little interest in people or the world of reality.

01:19

A meek and tidy soul, he has a need for order and structure, and a passion for detail.

01:24

Which of the following do you find more likely?

01:27

Steve is a librarian, or Steve is a farmer?

01:31

Some of you may recognize this as an example from a study

01:34

conducted by the two psychologists Daniel Kahneman and Amos Tversky.

01:38

Their work was a big deal, it won a Nobel Prize,

01:40

and it's been popularized many times over in books like Kahneman's Thinking Fast and

01:44

Slow, or Michael Lewis's The Undoing Project.

01:47

What they researched was human judgments, with a frequent focus on when these

01:51

judgments irrationally contradict what the laws of probability suggest they should be.

01:56

The example with Steve, our maybe-librarian-maybe-farmer,

01:59

illustrates one specific type of irrationality,

02:02

or maybe I should say alleged irrationality, there are people who debate the

02:06

conclusion here, but more on all of that later on.

02:09

According to Kahneman and Tversky, after people are given this description

02:13

of Steve as a meek and tidy soul, most say he's more likely to be a librarian.

02:18

After all, these traits line up better with the

02:20

stereotypical view of a librarian than a farmer.

02:24

And according to Kahneman and Tversky, this is irrational.

02:27

The point is not whether people hold correct or biased views about the

02:31

personalities of librarians and farmers, it's that almost nobody thinks to

02:35

incorporate information about the ratio of farmers to librarians in their judgments.

02:40

In their paper, Kahneman and Tversky said that in the US that ratio is about 20 to 1.

02:45

The numbers I could find today put that much higher,

02:48

but let's stick with the 20 to 1 number, since it's a little easier to illustrate

02:52

and proves the point as well.

02:54

To be clear, anyone who has asked this question is not expected to have perfect

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