This specific point is why I said “relatively” little idea, and not zero idea. You have defended the common-sense version of “improving” a reward function (which I agree with, don’t reward obvious bad things), but I perceive you to have originally claimed a much more aggressive and speculative claim, which is something like “‘amplified’ reward signals are improvements over non-‘amplified’ reward signals” (which might well be true, but how would we know?).
Amplification can just be used as a method for making more and better common-sense improvements, though. You could also do all sorts of other stuff with it, but standard examples (like “catch agents when they lie to us”) seem very much like common-sense improvements.
This specific point is why I said “relatively” little idea, and not zero idea. You have defended the common-sense version of “improving” a reward function (which I agree with, don’t reward obvious bad things), but I perceive you to have originally claimed a much more aggressive and speculative claim, which is something like “‘amplified’ reward signals are improvements over non-‘amplified’ reward signals” (which might well be true, but how would we know?).
Amplification can just be used as a method for making more and better common-sense improvements, though. You could also do all sorts of other stuff with it, but standard examples (like “catch agents when they lie to us”) seem very much like common-sense improvements.