I have what I think is a good example of how useless āAIā is for understanding. I am tagging widely. I searched āhow to identify mushroomsā on DuckDuckGo, which then so helpfully spammed my screen with this lovely advice (see image with alt text). The source of much of my knowledge is mushroomexpert.com, managed by Michael Kuo.
āA mushroom is identified by its characteristicsā. I could get semantic here too about the definition of a mushroom, but talk about a pretty useless statement. Fine though. Thatās well enough and good if you want an explanation that is super entry level. Thatās not necessarily a bad thing, though I donāt remember telling the āAIā that I wanted only entry level information.
Then it talks about the danger in attempting to ID mushrooms because of the potential for poisoning. It tacitly assumes that my wanting to ID a mushroom means I want to eat it. I donāt. I just like mushrooms. I have a problem with the whole āsome are poisonousā throw-in, like its something their lawyers required them to include. How many are poisonous? 90%? 5%? We have no idea, and thatās OK. I didnāt tell the āAIā that I wanted information on whether or not they were poisonous. But, as Iāll get to, the fact that this is included is not my problem. My problem is what they donāt include.
I think mushrooms are awesome. I think the fact that some of them are poisonous is relevant only based on the human-centric assumptions āAIā is so obsessed with and what itās dataset is built on. I donāt see the value in a mushroom based on whether or not I can eat it, and it chaffs me that they donāt also include any information about their ecological roles. You know what is a great way to identify a mushroom (including if I want to eat it)?!?!?! Their ecology (essentially, their ābehaviorā)!!! Letās be sure to not mention that, #TechBros.
Ok letās keep going, cause weāve made it this far. It suggests talking to a #mycologist. It turns out that I donāt have any experienced mycologists on call. Mycologists are helpful but busy people. And Iām more likely than most of the population to know mycologists. You might as well say, ādonāt bother trying to ID the mushroomā. Way to kill my interest immediately in something Iām trying to get into. If you really want to learn to ID mushrooms for foraging, there are sources you can look up to help you.
Iāll get to my main point. Identification of certain mushroom forming fungi to species is essentially impossible. Look up Amanitas or Russulas on mushroomexpert.com (phenomenal source, old school blogging). There is no clear delineating of what a mushroom forming species even is. Scientists argue over and reclassify bird subspecies all the time. Imagine the black box that is mushroom forming fungi, which most of the time is a web of single-cell wide threads hidden in the soil. Some mushrooms historically were āIDedā (scientifically) by taste or color, which as you all know everyone experiences these things the same, all the time. And, darnit, I happened to leave my DNA sequencing kit at home (as if there arenāt issues with classifying mushroom forming fungi on their DNA alone).
If āAIā were functional, to me, it would include the suggestion that one option is, instead of focusing on species, focus on species groupings (this also applies to foraging for mushrooms if done thoughtfully). Species groupings can be more useful, as is sometimes saying: āI donāt need to know exactly what this is. Iāll just focus on itās ecology instead of obsessing over an arbitrary definitionā. This nuance is not something that can be corrected with better algorithms or more training data (in fact, its going to get worse), because #LLM s are designed to spit out the lowest common denominator.
In the end, given all the questions I brought up, the biggest problems I have with āAIā is that it falsely assumes something gigantic about the question I am asking and gives a simplified and highly misleading perception of how much we actually know. I think it makes a big mistake assuming that I am uncurious and want a bare-minimum answer. And when it comes to the grand total of all there is to know about mushroom forming fungi, we know next to nothing. Of course, 'AI' cannot say that because 'AI' doesn't know what it doesn't know.
You know who can identify and communicate all of these nuances? Humans.
#nature #mushrooms #fungi #AI #technology #artificialIntelligence #ecology #solarPunk #EcologicalReciprocity