Modeling Human Preferences: Distributions and Noise
When you seek to align machine learning systems with human values, you must formally represent human preferences. At the most basic level, a preference relation describes when a human prefers one outcome over another. Formally, if you have two options, A and B, the relation A≻B means "A is preferred to B." In practice, human choices are rarely deterministic; instead, they exhibit variability due to uncertainty, ambiguity, or other factors. This motivates the use of stochastic choice models, which assign probabilities to each possible choice rather than treating preferences as fixed. For example, you might model the probability that a human prefers A to B as P(A≻B), which can be estimated from observed choices.
To capture the full range of possible human behaviors, you introduce the concept of a preference distribution. This distribution describes the likelihood of each possible ranking or selection among a set of options. Such distributions allow you to account for both consistent and inconsistent preferences across different individuals or even within the same individual over time.
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Can you explain more about stochastic choice models and how they work?
What are some common methods for estimating preference distributions?
How do these concepts help in aligning AI systems with human values?
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Modeling Human Preferences: Distributions and Noise
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When you seek to align machine learning systems with human values, you must formally represent human preferences. At the most basic level, a preference relation describes when a human prefers one outcome over another. Formally, if you have two options, A and B, the relation A≻B means "A is preferred to B." In practice, human choices are rarely deterministic; instead, they exhibit variability due to uncertainty, ambiguity, or other factors. This motivates the use of stochastic choice models, which assign probabilities to each possible choice rather than treating preferences as fixed. For example, you might model the probability that a human prefers A to B as P(A≻B), which can be estimated from observed choices.
To capture the full range of possible human behaviors, you introduce the concept of a preference distribution. This distribution describes the likelihood of each possible ranking or selection among a set of options. Such distributions allow you to account for both consistent and inconsistent preferences across different individuals or even within the same individual over time.
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