CAN COMPUTERS GENERATE RANDOM NUMBERS?????/?
“One thing that traditional computer systems aren’t good at is
coin flipping,” says Steve
Ward, Professor of Computer Science and Engineering at MIT’s
Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory. “They’re
deterministic, which means that if you ask the same question you’ll get the
same answer every time. In fact, such machines are specifically and carefully
programmed toeliminate randomness
in results. They do this by following rules and relying on algorithms when they
compute.”
You can program a machine
to generate what can be called “random” numbers, but the machine is always at
the mercy of its programming. “On a completely deterministic machine you can’t
generate anything you could really call a random sequence of numbers,” says
Ward, “because the machine is following the same algorithm to generate them.
Typically, that means it starts with a common ‘seed’ number and then follows a
pattern.” The results may be sufficiently complex to make the pattern difficult
to identify, but because it is ruled by a carefully defined and consistently
repeated algorithm, the numbers it produces are not truly random. “They are
what we call ‘pseudo-random’ numbers,” Ward says.
For most applications, a
pseudo-random number is sufficient, he adds. “For example, if you want to do a
random sampling of a large set of data, you’ll need numbers to feed into the program
so that the samples are more or less evenly distributed. Using pseudo-random
numbers is perfectly acceptable in this case because there’s no quantitative
advantage in the degree of randomness.” Similarly, a CD player in “random” mode
is probably really playing in pseudo-random mode, with a pattern that is
discernible if you listen carefully enough.
Not all randomness is pseudo, however, says Ward. There are ways
that machines can generate truly random numbers. And the importance of true
randomness is not to be underestimated, he adds. “If you go to an online poker
site, for example, and you know the algorithm and seed, you can write a program
that will predict the cards that are going to be dealt.” Truly random numbers
make such reverse engineering impossible, he adds. There are devices that
generate numbers that claim to be truly random. They rely on unpredictable
processes like thermal or atmospheric noise rather than human-defined patterns.
The results might still be slightly biased towards higher numbers or even
numbers, but they’re not generated by a deterministic algorithm. (A similar
online solution is available at random.org.)
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