Or so says a controversial Stanford researcher, who finds that the latest systems have, against all odds, mastered a high-level cognitive skill.
Michal Kosinski is a Stanford research psychologist with a nose for timely subjects. He sees his work as not only advancing knowledge, but alerting the world to potential dangers ignited by the consequences of computer systems. His best-known projects involved analyzing the ways in which Facebook gained a shockingly deep understanding of its users from all the times they clicked “like” on the platform. Now he’s shifted to the study of surprising things that AI can do.
“It seems that these abilities go beyond simply regurgitating the data used to train the LLMs,” he says, and that “it is possible to reconstruct a great deal of information about human mental states from the statistics of natural language.” I’m agnostic about whether LLMs will achieve true theory of mind. What matters is whether they behave as if they have that skill, and they are definitely on the road to that.
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