SAN FRANCISCO: On a new day, Tudor Achim gave a mind teaser to an artificial intelligence app called Aristotle. The problem involved a 10-by-10 tables filled with a hundred amounts. He asked:” If you collected the smallest amount in each column and the largest amount in each paragraph, had the largest of the small amounts ever be greater than the smallest of the large figures?” The app correctly responded,” No.” But that was not unexpected. Popular bots does give the right answer, to. Aristotle had already demonstrated that its response was accurate. A detailed computer program was created by the scammer to verify that” No” was the correct answer.
Chatbots including ChatGPT and Gemini may answer questions, read poetry, summarise information articles and create images. They even make errors that defy common sense, though. Occasionally, they make things up — a phenome no called hallucination.
Achim, CEO and co-founder of a Silicon Valley startup cultural led Harmonic, is piece of growing effort to build a new kind of AI that always hallucinates. Now, this technology is focused on calculus. However, some researchers think they can apply the exact methods to computer software and other fields. Companies like Harmonic can create AI technologies that can verify their own answers and develop reliable information because math is a strict discipline with proper methods for proving whether an answer is correct or incorrect.
Some scientists believe they can develop an AI system that performs mathematics more effectively than any man. That’s the goal of Achim and his co-founder Peter Tenev. Harmonic, their business, has received$ 75 million in cash from Sequoia Capital and other traders. Some people think that these methods can be extended more, creating AI systems that can verify both mathematical and physical principles.
Aristotle checks its own answers, which results in huge amounts of reliable data that can be used to teach Artificial systems. This is” synthetic information,” or AI-generated information that can be used to train AI, is what experts refer to as. This idea is regarded as a crucial component of AI growth, according to scientists. Aristotle may get better at math after years of training, according to Achim and Tenev, according to Achim and Tenev. ” We want it to resolve problems that have never been solved”, Tenev says.
Trending
- Hassan Nasrallah to Nabil Kaouk: 7 Hezbollah commanders killed in Israeli strikes in 7 days
- ‘My crowds are pretty big’: Kamala Harris mocks Trump during fundraiser
- Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs taken ‘off suicide watch’ as court trial looms
- Melania Trump reveals her son Barron Trump’s living situation in college
- Kris Kristofferson, celebrated musician, actor, activist, dead at age 88
- Could an all-out war in the Middle East be avoided? What Biden said
- Is mathematics the path to AI chatbots that don’t make stuff up?
- Cash-strapped Pakistan cuts 150,000 jobs, dissolves 6 ministries as part of IMF deal