Psychologist Beating Math Nerds in Race to Netflix Prize 205
s1d writes "An almost-anonymous British psychologist named Gavin Potter has suddenly risen to the top of the Netflix prize charts. With his very first attempt, he got a score which took the BellKor team seven months to reach. Currently at a score of 8.07, he has only five teams ahead of him now in the race for the ultimate Netflix algorithm. 'Potter says his anonymity is mostly accidental. He started that way and didn't come out into the open until after Wired found him. "I guess I didn't think it was worth putting up a link until I had got somewhere," he says, adding that he'd been seriously posting under the name of his venture capital and consulting firm, Mathematical Capital, for two months before launching "Just a guy." When he started competing, he posted to his blog: "Decided to take the Netflix Prize seriously. Looks kind of fun. Not sure where I will get to as I am not an academic or a mathematician. However, being an unemployed psychologist I do have a bit of time."'"
Beating everyone? (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:Beating everyone? (Score:5, Funny)
Welcome to your therapy session.
Surely not everyone?
Can you elaborate on that?
Why do you mention computers?
Why do you mention computers?
Does that question interest you?
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This is my emacs ELIZA session (Score:2)
Why do you say before everyone gets all in a tizzy?
Is it because you are already on the case to return the favor that you came to me?
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Domain Knowledge (Score:5, Insightful)
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Re:Domain Knowledge (Score:5, Funny)
Like they really had a choice...
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Wooosh! (Score:2)
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In the case of great scientists, artists, politicians or inventors, it may simply be about pure fascination with
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Re:Domain Knowledge (Score:4, Insightful)
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Sir! I challenge you sir, I challenge you to come up one with any woman, no; one single human being, who is as interesting, in depth, challenging and beautiful as the General Theory of Relativity.
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I love it when women aren't interesting enough, men are blamed. Seriously, if she's too shallow to take an interest in the things he likes, then she should have not married him. Some women are so busy trying to find a sugar daddy they forget they're going to have to live with the "bastard."
Einstein's wife was a scientist not a "gold digger"
From PBS web site [pbs.org]
Who was Mileva Maric? Until recently, the life of Einstein's first wife was little more than a footnote in her famous husband's biography. The world only learned of her existence through the first release of Einstein's private letters in 1987, which offered tantalizing glimpses of a brilliant and ambitious woman who shared her husband's interest in science. This project invites you to explore the facts of Mileva Maric's life and her role as a pioneer in the history of women in science.
Emphasis mine.
What's the point? (Score:5, Interesting)
And yes, I have karma to burn. Yes I do.
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Right. Unless it's your brother that was robbed, your mother's house that burned, your life savings tied up in the boat that sank, your cow that was run down, or your new neighbor's rabid dog that needs killing.
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If you don't find out about those until you read about them in the newspaper, your family qualifies as dysfunctional. Really dysfunctional.
Re:What's the point? (Score:5, Funny)
Average psychologist (Score:5, Informative)
that had an undergraduate degree in psychology, a masters degree in operations research [wikipedia.org] that after being well employed for a number of years -- "In 2006, he left his job at IBM to explore the idea of starting a PhD in machine learning, a field in which he has no formal training. When he read about the Netflix Prize, he decided to give it a shot -- what better way to find out just how serious about the topic he really was?"
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psych majors (Score:2)
I have a BA from U. of Houston, which I have used to do tech support and sales for a software company, and developed my own FPS as a solo project.
That's true (Score:5, Interesting)
I've also found this to be true. Lol, I actually knew people in college that did nothing but program computers in their spare time, and took psych because it was easy, wouldn't distract them and gave them more time to do the programming they wanted. They didn't ever expect to practice psych.
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Misleading summary (Score:5, Informative)
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Not to mention that it likely can't be reduced to Boolean logic.
/Sorry
Interdiscplinary approach (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Interdiscplinary approach (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Interdiscplinary approach (Score:5, Interesting)
I work for a small company. My current job isn't stable, and doesn't pay well, so I'm taking an IT course so I can land a (hopefully) stable job/career.
However... in my current job I wear all kinds of hats. Server's down? I'll fix it. Marketing materials need to be designed? I'll do it. Proposal needs to be edited? I'm there. Computer needs more RAM? I'll install it. Photo of product needs to be masked-out? Done. Need to do some research? I'll get on it.
The kind of job I'm being trained for... I'll be stuck on the straight and narrow, handling one sort of task. When companies want an IT guy, they want an IT guy. I don't know how I'll be able to handle that. I LIKE having different responsibilities. I don't want to be one guy on an org chart with a specified duty.
Blah. I really went on a tangent there...
Re:Interdiscplinary approach (Score:5, Insightful)
If you aren't careful, you end up being the fall guy for a widening array of mishaps.
For instance, you help set up the video projector a couple of times for presentations. Then during the next presentation the projector fails. In some eyes it will be your fault, because you're now the "PowerPoint Guy." Nevermind that the bulb was past its recommended use hours, or that the presenter forgot his VGA dongle, or whatever.
It seems like if I want to come out as the go-to guy for some area of tech, I'd damn well better get up to pro-level speed really quick. Because soon I'm going to have to be mitigating crises and solving complex problems that before were just chalked up to "well, that thing's always been a problem." Yeah, now it is *your* problem!
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However, no one will dare mention all of the real requirements. You see, the valid candidates will run screaming away because it looks to be too much, but what you end up with is a person who scoffs at all the extra that wasn't mentioned when he was hired.
Thus, eventually the cycle continues until you no longer need the jack of all trades and have many very specialized people who cannot get anything completed
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Of course you're always going to specialize...and hoping learning new things in that field everyday. The second that I have been practicing at a high level for a couple of months in a field is the second that I start training my replacement while I look for something new to sink my teeth into. That way I mostly mast
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I'm an IT guy now who also wears a dozen hats. I'm also a Business Management student, and a frequent topic of discussion is about generational differences in the American workforce. It's been noted that past generations would trade all kinds of job satisfaction in return for job security. More recent generations are not so willing. Businesses have also changed. Companies expect greater turnover, are more flexible than they used to be, and operate "leaner" than they used to.
There's alw
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What I want? After stumbling around with a small, unstable company for 7 years, with virtually nothing to show for it (heck, the owners, now in their 30s and 40s, still live at home with their mom), I think it's what I NEED.
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Loyalty, pretty much.
WWLD? (What would leonardo do?) (Score:5, Funny)
Oh, I don't know. If only we had a art history & statistics dual major to figure it out...
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Actually any good scientists nowadays probably knows more from across different fields than
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I don't think you need to read in any great cultural change to a cross-disciplinary approach here: the problem is one well-suited to th
Re:Uh, no... (Score:5, Insightful)
Furthermore, because early scientists did not have as much to build on, that makes it all the more difficult. Where was Faraday to get his inspiration on lines of force? What lead Maxwell in the right direction to unifying light with electromagnetism?
It's great that 3rd graders know about electric circuits. That's the point of scientific progress. That doesn't make the original task trivial in any sense.
In other words, I hate you.
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All of 18th century science? Really? (Score:5, Insightful)
If you know how to do all those things, good for you. My point is that a secondary school education in "science" does not by itself provide one with the same understanding as the great scientists who first among all others figured out how to do each of these things.
Re:All of 18th century science? Really? (Score:4, Funny)
Set the room temperature to 20 degrees, wait, mark off that level on the thermometer. Set the room temperature to 21 degrees....
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For what it's worth 20 C = 68 F
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The original fahrenheit scale was a base 12 scale, which divides evenly by many numbers. Same reason there are 24 hours in a day.
If you want to talk about "sane", use Kelvin. A negative temperature isn't sane.
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On the back of giants (Score:3, Interesting)
There does not appear to be that many 'giant' scientific figures anymore despite the exponential scientif
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He worked as a patent clerk for many years. That required him to research a wide range of scientific subjects and understand whether each item was actually feasable.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patent_examiner [wikipedia.org]
http://www.kpkb.com/news-article-patent-intellectual-property.html [kpkb.com]
http://www.aip.org/history/einstein/ae10.htm [aip.org]
I
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That said there are whole fields th
Umm.... (Score:5, Informative)
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Psychologist? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Psychologist? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Psychologist? (Score:5, Funny)
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-G
Re:Psychologist? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Psychologist? (Score:4, Funny)
You kids get offa my lawn!
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Re:Psychologist? (Score:5, Insightful)
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Thinking about how people shop (Score:5, Interesting)
So, if I was to setup a movie viewing for them. I'd setup something along the lines of a Genre, rating(R,PG-13,G), Alphabet.
It's kind of a takeoff on my video game organization method that increases sales of video games by 30 percent. I called it ABSRG short for Alphabetize By Section(4 foot section), Rating(M on top T in the middle and E towards the bottom.), Genre(Sports, driving, shoot em up). Please note, this cannot be patented, I already let it go out for more than a year(Started in 1998)and I have the pictures and time notes to prove it.
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Just so happens, I've worked in all these areas.
Free Idea (Score:5, Interesting)
Okay, I'm not trying for this prize, but there's one thing about Netflix "recommendations" that bugs me so I'm throwing out this complete freebie of an idea. If it helps someone get a 0.001% improvement to add this ONE little additional check, great.
I am learning Japanese. I have been watching several hundred Japanese-language movies for the past couple years. I don't watch movies in Greek, Spanish, Turkish, Farsi, Italian, Russian, German, or Hebrew. I did watch Amelie four years ago but that doesn't mean I love French movies. Most of my recommendations are for foreign films, but only a small fraction of those recommendations are for Japanese movies.
Apparently, Netflix doesn't have a column in their database saying WHAT language a movie uses principally, it just has a flag saying it is not English. It's the only explanation I can see for not checking for such a strong correlation. I admit, I might not be sharing the experience of the most common movie-renting drone in the bunch, but I doubt I'm the only person who has such a lopsided taste in movies. If the language (or alternate soundtrack languages) ARE known in the database, please see if the renter has a bias for movies in a particular language.
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It doesn't store any data about the language, actually. (It's at least not something that is available for the contestants.) All relations between movies (same language, similar length, same genre, same actors, similar number of characters and what not) are supposed to shine throught in users' ratings. That means that with enough ratings in the database, yo
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You might also try to copy my recommendations, since it recommends quite a few Japanese movies based on that...
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They make tentacle porn in Greek, Spanish, Turkish, Farsi, Italian, Russian, German, amd Hebrew?
You learn something every day.
-b
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Contest participants retain ownership of the code they write, but the winning team must license it (non-exclusively) to Netflix.
how many GB is the dataset? (Score:2)
Re:how many GB is the dataset? (Score:4, Informative)
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As I understand from the rules, each customer rates a bunch of movies. How many customers are there? How many movies? How many ratings does each customer do (on average, perhaps)?
Re:how many GB is the dataset? (Score:4, Informative)
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Poor math nerds... (Score:4, Funny)
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Slightly different take... (Score:3, Insightful)
Even if he only gets to 9.25% I will bet he gets offers to work with AI researchers around the globe. That is, after all, what their stated goal is - more or less. Every programmer knows about the GUI wars, and has read stories about how programmers have trouble writing code or designing web sites that are intuitive for users. If you want to see you code break, put a user on the keyboard and wait a few minutes.
Just about everything that I do with computers shows me something that could be more impressive or intuitive. Can you say 'click START to shutdown' ? Applying psychology and math to a computer problem is a problem that programmers are faced with all the time, and the industry as a whole fails on this repeatedly. A matter of personal interest, hobby robotics, holds a particular problem that seems simple but is not and demonstrates the scope of the problem with this story. Try to build a small robot that can wander around your house and never get stuck behind the couch, or anywhere else. Even cockroaches can accomplish this, but sophisticated robotics cannot.
We've all seen people come from nowhere, solve a problem because they looked at it a different way than everyone else based on their experiences. I think that it is about time that we started doing more of this. The biggest problem that I can see thus far is that people don't act like computers, they seldom repeat anything with precision. Can you say manufacturing robot? Everyone of us has personal tastes, and it's usually only when Hollywood tells us what movies are good that we all fall in line. Sure, some 'blockbusters' fail, but they make money because of the hype. When you remove the hype, it falls apart. Picking out what other people like or might like based on a very small data set is a difficult task. Not everyone likes kids or movies for kids. Not everyone likes hollywood-ized cookie cutter movies. The task is daunting at best.
Apply that thinking to other things, and you can see why some websites work and others do not. Why some software works and why others fail. Should F1 be the help key or F3? Why not CTRL-H? Maybe your preferences for such things differ from mine. What I'm getting at is that predicting what a human will do is not simple. Categorizing movies by story, style, genre etc. is like applying a tag cloud to it and matching the tag hits of one group to your personal tag choices. It kind of works, kind of does not. Either way, it needs to be applied more often. Just today I received a thank you note from the local Honda dealer where I got my seat belt replaced under warranty. I bought the car 15 years ago from the dealer my mother likes, and is two states away from me now. The dealer that send the card is local to me (2 states from my mom) but they sent the card to her, at MY address. Tell me how a human would have done that?
The basic problem is that we humans accrue various bits of information and make decisions based on that. Our thinking process halts when something 'just doesn't make sense' to what we are doing. Computers don't do that... yet. Perhaps this guy is on to something, but then maybe not. A human would not only ask what other people liked this movie, but also "you really liked that piece of crap?"
To put the I in AI is going to take a lot of rethinking. Simply acting like a perfect human won't do it. Oh, you liked that movie? yeah, me too, I love the city where it was filmed. -- get a program to do that? That oddball out-of-left-field thinking is what will make the software very good at predicting what you will or will not like, maybe.
Have you ever tried to figure out what kind of music someone wou
And? (Score:4, Interesting)
A Physicist goes to a Mathematician for advise on solving a Differential Equation. The Physicist explains this and writes the equation on a Blackboard. The Mathematician stares at the equation for more than half an hour. Finally, he says, "Yes, it has a solution."
Basically, the Maths (even applied) are about details and considering them *very* carefully. With this in mind, is it any surprise that they are somewhat "slow"? Especially when they are starting from scratch within the problem domain?
Not all of the Top 5 are just Math Nerds (Score:4, Insightful)
Almost anonymous? (Score:5, Funny)
The guy has an OR masters (Score:2)
What would a psychologist know about anything? (Score:2, Funny)
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Netflix have set out exactly what product they want and the price they are willing to pay. If there are people out there willing and able to supply them with the product at that price, why shouldn't they?
And government employees doing research in thier own time is not costing you a dime.
Netflix benefits through a better product offering, thier customers benefit through a better product, and a fair number of contestants benefit (
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Nobody forced them to participate.
A team mentionned that they have learnt quite a lot during the contest.
The psychologist may loose the contest...But the publicity around is priceless IMHO. You would ever heard about him without it.