No, that's the same misunderstanding previously stated.
Answering "I don't know" because it a likely response to a particular string is completely different from being aware that one does not know the answer and saying so.
Both motivations lead to the same outcome, but they're unrelated processes. The response "I don't know" can represent either:
1. The most likely answer to a particular question, based on statistical data; or
2. An expression of an agent's internal state.
Figuring out that distinction is perhaps one of the most important questions ever raised.
digging|1 year ago
Answering "I don't know" because it a likely response to a particular string is completely different from being aware that one does not know the answer and saying so.
Both motivations lead to the same outcome, but they're unrelated processes. The response "I don't know" can represent either:
1. The most likely answer to a particular question, based on statistical data; or
2. An expression of an agent's internal state.
Figuring out that distinction is perhaps one of the most important questions ever raised.