
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


In this episode of A Beginner's Guide to AI, we dive into the concept of Continual Learning—the critical process that allows AI models to learn new information without losing what they already know.
From understanding the problem of catastrophic forgetting to exploring groundbreaking solutions like DeepMind’s Elastic Weight Consolidation, we break down how AI can learn and grow over time, just like humans.
We'll also walk you through a relatable analogy and a real-world case study to make the concept crystal clear.
Tune in to get my thoughts, and don't forget to subscribe to our Newsletter!
Want to get in contact? Write me an email: [email protected]
This podcast was generated with the help of ChatGPT, Mistral, and Claude 3. We do fact-check with human eyes, but there might still be some hallucinations in the output.
Music credit: "Modern Situations" by Unicorn Heads.
By Dietmar Fischer3.1
5050 ratings
In this episode of A Beginner's Guide to AI, we dive into the concept of Continual Learning—the critical process that allows AI models to learn new information without losing what they already know.
From understanding the problem of catastrophic forgetting to exploring groundbreaking solutions like DeepMind’s Elastic Weight Consolidation, we break down how AI can learn and grow over time, just like humans.
We'll also walk you through a relatable analogy and a real-world case study to make the concept crystal clear.
Tune in to get my thoughts, and don't forget to subscribe to our Newsletter!
Want to get in contact? Write me an email: [email protected]
This podcast was generated with the help of ChatGPT, Mistral, and Claude 3. We do fact-check with human eyes, but there might still be some hallucinations in the output.
Music credit: "Modern Situations" by Unicorn Heads.

334 Listeners

152 Listeners

207 Listeners

110 Listeners

154 Listeners

227 Listeners

611 Listeners

273 Listeners

107 Listeners

173 Listeners

55 Listeners

48 Listeners

146 Listeners

62 Listeners

24 Listeners