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You hear the terms Artificial Intelligence, Machine Learning, and Deep Learning every day. People often use them interchangeably, but they are not the same thing. Using them incorrectly can make it sound like you don't know what you're talking about.
If you prefer a video version, you can watch it here:
You hear the terms Artificial Intelligence, Machine Learning, and Deep Learning every day. People often use them interchangeably, but they are not the same thing. Using them incorrectly can make it sound like you don't know what you're talking about.
To fix this, let's visualize the concepts using a Russian nesting doll.
1. The Outer Shell: Artificial Intelligence (AI)
Imagine the biggest doll. This is AI.
It is the broad umbrella term for any technique that enables computers to mimic human intelligence. This includes everything from the super-smart robots in sci-fi movies to the ghosts in Pac-Man.
If you write a program with a thousand if/else statements to play chess, that is technically AI. It mimics intelligence, but it doesn't strictly "learn."
2. The Middle Doll: Machine Learning (ML)
Open the big doll, and inside is Machine Learning.
This is where things get interesting. In traditional AI, you explicitly tell the computer rules; in Machine Learning, you give it data.
If you show the machine 10,000 pictures of cats and dogs, it figures out the rules itself using statistics. It learns from experience. This technology is what powers your Netflix recommendations and email spam filters.
3. The Smallest Doll: Deep Learning (DL)
Inside the middle doll is the smallest, most complex one: Deep Learning.
This is a specialized subset of Machine Learning. While ML relies on statistics, Deep Learning uses neural networks—structures inspired by the human brain.
It uses layers of artificial neurons to process massive amounts of complex data. This requires huge computing power but achieves results that traditional ML never could, powering self-driving cars, facial recognition, and ChatGPT.
The Summary
Here is the hierarchy: Deep Learning is a type of Machine Learning, which is a type of AI. Not all AI learns, but all Deep Learning is AI.
Now you know the difference. Next time someone tries to sell you an "AI toothbrush," you can ask them if it uses a neural network or just a simple if/else statement.
If you prefer a video version, you can watch it here:
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