Self-supervised learning is when a computer learns by figuring out patterns on its own, like a kid who plays with toys and finds new ways to use them.
Imagine you have a box full of jigsaw puzzle pieces, but no picture to guide you. You still try to put the pieces together because you know that some shapes fit better than others. That’s kind of how self-supervised learning works, the computer looks at data, like puzzle pieces, and tries to find hidden rules or connections without being told exactly what it should look for.
How It Works
In self-supervised learning, the computer gets part of the answer and has to guess the rest. Think of it like this: if you see half a word on a T-shirt, “_eppy”, you might figure out it’s “Happy” because that makes sense in the context.
Why It Matters
This kind of learning is super useful because it doesn’t need lots of instructions from humans. Just like how kids can learn to play games by themselves, computers can also learn big things on their own, saving time and making tasks easier for everyone!
Examples
- A child learns to read by guessing the missing word in a sentence like 'The ___ ran across the field.'
- A student solves math problems without being given the answer first.
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See also
- What are feature embeddings?
- But What Is Overfitting in Machine Learning?
- How Does Machine Learning Explained in 100 Seconds Work?
- What is Machine learning (ML)?
- What are machine learning techniques?