How Do Humans Teach: On Curriculum Learning and Teaching Dimension

Abstract

We study the empirical strategies that humans follow as they teach a target concept with a simple 1D threshold to a robot. Previous studies of computational teaching, particularly the teaching dimension model and the curriculum learning principle, offer contradictory predictions on what optimal strategy the teacher should follow in this teaching task. We show through behavioral studies that humans employ three distinct teaching strategies, one of which is consistent with the curriculum learning principle, and propose a novel theoretical framework as a potential explanation for this strategy. This framework, which assumes a teaching goal of minimizing the learner's expected generalization error at each iteration, extends the standard teaching dimension model and offers a theoretical justification for curriculum learning.

Cite

Text

Khan et al. "How Do Humans Teach: On Curriculum Learning and Teaching Dimension." Neural Information Processing Systems, 2011.

Markdown

[Khan et al. "How Do Humans Teach: On Curriculum Learning and Teaching Dimension." Neural Information Processing Systems, 2011.](https://mlanthology.org/neurips/2011/khan2011neurips-humans/)

BibTeX

@inproceedings{khan2011neurips-humans,
  title     = {{How Do Humans Teach: On Curriculum Learning and Teaching Dimension}},
  author    = {Khan, Faisal and Mutlu, Bilge and Zhu, Xiaojin},
  booktitle = {Neural Information Processing Systems},
  year      = {2011},
  pages     = {1449-1457},
  url       = {https://mlanthology.org/neurips/2011/khan2011neurips-humans/}
}