Listen now | This week it seemed like a good idea to take a look at some of the most highly cited AI papers. Back during week 81 of this journey into writing on Substack, I took a look at some of the most highly cited ML papers [1]. I was expecting a lot more overlap, but was pleasantly surprised at the differences. One of the papers really stood out based on the total number of citations and it’s up first. Intellectually I can accept that a paper has more than 100,000 citations, but in practice that is an awful lot of references for an academic paper to have and a representation of a degree of asynchronous interaction between researchers that helps bring the intellectual space called the academy to life.
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Highly cited AI papers
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Listen now | This week it seemed like a good idea to take a look at some of the most highly cited AI papers. Back during week 81 of this journey into writing on Substack, I took a look at some of the most highly cited ML papers [1]. I was expecting a lot more overlap, but was pleasantly surprised at the differences. One of the papers really stood out based on the total number of citations and it’s up first. Intellectually I can accept that a paper has more than 100,000 citations, but in practice that is an awful lot of references for an academic paper to have and a representation of a degree of asynchronous interaction between researchers that helps bring the intellectual space called the academy to life.