cthia wrote:cthia wrote:Which is where I think the wind beneath Lewis and Linda's wings came from.
tlb wrote:To give credit where due, Linda and Lewis did not derive the results, they only got to present them; it was the "tea-leaf readers" who generated the report. They would be the analysts of Naval Intelligence reporting to Rear Admiral Victor Lewis, Director of Operational Research, and his boss Vice Admiral Linda Trenis of Bureau of Planning, as Jonathan_S told you
At any rate, I suppose there is a chance the tea leaf readers didn't have access to the predictive model that top brass ordered up and which was obviously created. Or that there was a reason to deny them access.
I don't think so, but, "To agree to disagree" should be easy for you and me. And everyone else makes three.
Jonathan_S wrote:Well the text ev about the predictive model simply said the analysists don't have good one.
I'd quibble that that does not necessarily mean it was obviously created. There are two ways I can see that statement being read:
1) They developed a model but it wasn't good.
2) They didn't have enough to develop a good model so they didn't waste time developing one they knew wouldn't be good.
My first read through the passage when the book still had its new smell, I had no doubts that a model was created.
Here's the thing. I am beginning to think nobody here has any experience using an expert system. Not only did I once work for a company designing them, I have designed my own and I continue to use it, using Lisp as I have shared many times in the forum. I am well aware of their capabilities and shortcomings. Expert systems become much better with time. The more you use them, the better they become. They learn. Think of chess programs and chatbots.
Here are undisputed facts:
[
Honor and Eighth Fleet was raising hell in Haven's backyard. Something had to be done to stop Honor.
An order was given to try and analyze the pattern. When an order is given in the military, you can best believe it is carried out. They didn't have anything else to rely upon. There was absolutely no other option.
]
Tea leaf readingWhen I first read this, it actually reminded me of my mother and sister and a mixed race family who had moved into our neighborhood before I was a teenager.
He was a Japanese man who had married a Chinese woman. That was very taboo during those days. She never felt comfortable. She had this odd looking tea set that she used to peer into after she drank the tea. (She performed this ritual of dropping tea leaves into the cup, preparing the tea and drinking it.) I thought she was worried that it had been poisoned, until my sister asked her. She explained it to us and gave my sister a similar set that she cherished. My mom had the habit of asking us "Did you get that silly notion from drinking your sister's tea?"
But the practice is as scientific as any type of fortune telling using tarot cards, astrology, or that of a bone oracle.
RFC was simply using the term loosely to suggest that the tea leaf readers used intuition (and as far as I am concerned)
for the most part.Because, even tea leaf readers need tea leaves to perform their magic. The tea leaf reading is accomplished by reading the pattern of the tea leaves in the cup in conjunction with the symbols around the cup. Probably all fortune telling use patterns.
The analysts were trying to predict any patterns to Honor's swashbuckling.
We could assume that a predictive model was not made
after the order was given to do so. I can not believe that the order was not carried out when it was mortally important and when there were no other options.
And I cannot believe that something so important would be entirely left up to fortune telling. So, the expert system which surely exists in the HV would have been consulted.
It is nearly impossible to get good results with an expert system without enough data to feed it. It is also almost as impossible to determine when you do not have enough data beforehand. Expert systems usually surprise you.The tea leaf readers did not raise their hands to the god of fortune telling and chanted. They needed their version of tea leaves as well. Their tea leaves would have been whatever data they had on Cut Worm's operation to date. Now, these readers could have had brains that stored all of this data and had total memory recall. But that is a long shot. And they could have been irresponsible and risked screwing up by the numbers by failing to at least consult with the predictive model. But I don't think so. And they may have had the inclination to use their intuition even knowing a predictive model was being prepared, and without knowing what the results would be. And they may have had time to play with their tea sets when all hands were ordered on deck and a scientific method had been ordered up. And they may not have had duties to assist in that endeavor. I don't think so.
What I think the author is saying is that the predictive model wasn't much help in the end and that the analysts had to wing it and use the tea leaf readers' intuition. But I think that intuition was
intuition from inference. Which often happens when using expert systems. The expert system couldn't give a definitive answer. But the tea leaf readers took it from there. Hmm...
Jonathan_S wrote:But even if we say the first case is true I wouldn't give a such a model much credit for predicting Honor's next targets; not when the best they seem to be able to say about it is that it is not "a good predictive model".
I agree. As you said I think the author wanted to infer that. But, I hardly think Linda and Lewis was willing to leave the entire thing up to fortune telling without having consulted an expert system. The expert system was simply unclear or incomplete. I wouldn't be surprised if the predictive model would have come up with the solution had they had more time refining the data and asking it the right questions. They just didn't have the time.
They had enough data. Because the data that their intuition worked on (the tea leaves) existed.
Jonathan_S wrote:However, that text ev is specifically about what the analysist had (or didn't; as the case might be). And that's the only predictive model mentioned -- so there's definitely nothing there even hinting that their bosses have access to any model the analysists don't. (And remember; they're saying the analysist "really don't have a good predictive model" after the analysts report is complete and passed up through their bosses to Theisman. There's no room to argue that the model started out bad and they made it good enough to pick the targets -- they've already put their bets down on Honor's next strikes before making the claim they couldn't make a good predictive model.
It seems to me that RFC is trying to be very clear that it was in large part human intuition that led them to winnow down the entire Republic to a list of 10 most likely, and 15 more still likely, target systems that Honor might try for.
So, I'd say if anything was the wind between Linda and Lewis's wings it was their hard working, and intuitive, analysists - and not any less than good predictive model those analysists might have used to assist in their work..
I agree that RFC was trying to convey that it was human intuition. But purely intuition? Without access to any of the known data? Intuition works on data, even if subliminally. Intuition isn't "conjured up" out of thin air.
Would top brass have been quick to accept this fortune telling-astrological-tarot reading-tea leaf solution without at least having consulted with the expert system as well? They had bosses too. And shit rolls down hill. I can just imagine the paint being blasted off the bulkheads of every ship in the fleet if the fortune telling didn't go as planned, after the debriefing ...
"You mean to tell me you counted on some kind of fucking fortune telling without at least consulting with a system in which we have invested billions of credits and man hours to create!?"
"It wasn't fortune telling, sir. It was intuition."
"Tell that to Congress you fucking idiot!"
So, yes, a predictive model was ordered. And being the Navy and considering the importance, you can bet your naval ass one was created.
And I think the tea leaf readers at least had the common sense to study that model in the very least. After all, they were Linda's tea leaf readers.
But! We are missing the forest for the trees arguing about the little bees. My original intent was that an expert system might be very useful in searching for Darius.
Unlike when trying to get into Honor's head, they have the time to search for Darius. They have a lot of data. And they will continue to get more.
I think the Ghost Hunters will share their data and it will be cross referenced, using a common everyday expert system.
.