Thursday, August 15, 2013

On machine learning as means for decision velocity

Chris Taylor has written in the HBR Blog a piece that advocates the idea that machine learning should be used to handle the main issue of big data - decision velocity.  I have written recently on decision latency, which according to some opinions - real-time analytics will be the next generation of what big data is about.
Chris' thesis is that the amount of data is substantially increasing with the Internet of Things, and thus one cannot get a decision manually in viewing all relevant data,  there will also not be enough data scientists to look at the data.   Machine learning which is goal oriented and not hypothesis asserting oriented will take this role.     I agree that machine learning will take a role in the solution, but here are some comments about the details:

Currently machine learning is off-line technology, case sensitive, and cannot be the sole source for decisions.


It is off-line technology, systems have to be trained, and typically it looks at historical data in perspective and learns trends and patterns using statistical reasoning methods.  There are cases of applying continuous learning, which again done mostly off-line, but is incrementally updated on-line.    When a pattern is learned it needs to be detected in real-time on streaming data, and here technology like event processing is quite useful, since what it does is indeed detect that predefined patterns occur on streaming data.  These predefined patterns can be achieved by machine learning.    The main challenge will be the online learning -- when the patterns need change, how fast this can be done in learning techniques.  There are some attempts at real-time machine learning (see presentation about Tumra as an example), but it is not a mature technology yet.

Case sensitive means that there is no one-size-fits-all solution for machine learning, and for each case the models have to be established in a very specific way for that case.  Thus, the shortage in data scientists will be replaced by shortage of statisticians,  there are not enough skills around to build all these systems, thus the state of the art need to be improved to make the machine learning process itself more automated.

Last but not least - I have written before that get decisions merely based on history is like driving a car by looking at the rear mirror.  Conclusion from historical knowledge should be combined with human knowledge and experience sometimes over incomplete or uncertain information.  Thus besides the patterns discovered by machine learning, a human expert may also insert additional patterns that should be considered, or modify the machine learning introduced patterns.




1 comment:

Gagan Saxena said...

The open question is how to get humans to participate in machine learning.

This is where Decision Management Technology comes in. It includes Advanced Analytics like Machine Learning as well as Business Rules Management Systems (BRMS). The latter is where Human Expertise can be explicitly stated and managed. So, ideally we need to create a Decision Service black box that holds the Machine Learning model surrounded by Human Expertise expressed as business rules. And viola, this Decision Service can now automate most operational decisions - and you have increased Decision Velocity. Building Decision Management systems does require explicit decision modeling and the need to start there first.

Let us tame the Machine by giving it business rule Prime Directives.