论文标题
人类学中的机器学习使用和滥用
Use and Misuse of Machine Learning in Anthropology
论文作者
论文摘要
现在,整个研究社区都可以广泛使用机器学习(ML),它促进了这些新兴的数学技术在广泛学科中的新型和引人注目的应用的扩散。在本文中,我们将重点介绍一个特定的案例研究:古人类学领域,该领域旨在根据生物学和文化证据理解人类的演变。正如我们将表明的那样,ML算法的易用性以及在人类学研究界的适当使用方面缺乏专业知识,导致了整个文献中出现的基本错误应用。由此产生的不可靠结果不仅破坏了将ML合法地纳入人类学研究的努力,而且会产生对我们人类进化和行为过去的潜在理解。 本文的目的是简要介绍古人类学中ML的某些方式;我们还为那些与该领域完全熟悉的人提供了一些基本ML算法的调查,而该算法仍在积极发展中。我们讨论了一系列的失误,错误和对ML方法的正确方案的违规行为,这些方案经常在人类学文献的累积体内出现。这些错误包括使用过时的算法和实践;不适当的火车/测试拆分,样本组成和文本解释;以及由于缺乏数据/代码共享以及随后对独立复制的限制而缺乏透明度。我们断言,扩大样本,共享数据和代码,重新评估同行评审的方法,以及最重要的是,开发包括ML专家在内的跨学科团队对于将来将ML纳入人类学的研究中的进步都是必要的。
Machine learning (ML), being now widely accessible to the research community at large, has fostered a proliferation of new and striking applications of these emergent mathematical techniques across a wide range of disciplines. In this paper, we will focus on a particular case study: the field of paleoanthropology, which seeks to understand the evolution of the human species based on biological and cultural evidence. As we will show, the easy availability of ML algorithms and lack of expertise on their proper use among the anthropological research community has led to foundational misapplications that have appeared throughout the literature. The resulting unreliable results not only undermine efforts to legitimately incorporate ML into anthropological research, but produce potentially faulty understandings about our human evolutionary and behavioral past. The aim of this paper is to provide a brief introduction to some of the ways in which ML has been applied within paleoanthropology; we also include a survey of some basic ML algorithms for those who are not fully conversant with the field, which remains under active development. We discuss a series of missteps, errors, and violations of correct protocols of ML methods that appear disconcertingly often within the accumulating body of anthropological literature. These mistakes include use of outdated algorithms and practices; inappropriate train/test splits, sample composition, and textual explanations; as well as an absence of transparency due to the lack of data/code sharing, and the subsequent limitations imposed on independent replication. We assert that expanding samples, sharing data and code, re-evaluating approaches to peer review, and, most importantly, developing interdisciplinary teams that include experts in ML are all necessary for progress in future research incorporating ML within anthropology.