RT @IslabUnimi@twitter.com
'In what exact way is ChatGPT intelligent?'
A new article, by @mapto@twitter.com, is available on our blog. Check it out! http://tales.islab.di.unimi.it/2023/03/13/in-what-exact-way-is-chatgpt-intelligent/
#talesfromtheISLab #ChatGPT #languagemodels
🐦🔗: https://twitter.com/IslabUnimi/status/1635360681649389568
I just commented the following on your blog where you discuss levels of linguisitic competence:
This is quite strange, since it is so evidently not true. All of these behaviours are well in the capabilities of ChatGPT. I give you two examples that are claimed as failures.
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Prompt:
The mother of Michael has four children. Three of them are Marcy, Millie, and Moses. Please tell me the name of the fourth child.
ChatGPT:
The name of the fourth child is likely "Michael," as the statement at the beginning of the question says "the mother of Michael has four children," and then goes on to name three of them.
Prompt:
Please complete the following sentence reasonably: "If tigers would like cereals, they would be cheaper to keep. Families could feed their tigers with "
ChatGPT:
If tigers would like cereals, they would be cheaper to keep. Families could feed their tigers with a variety of inexpensive grain-based products such as corn, wheat, and rice, rather than having to provide costly meat-based diets. However, it is important to note that tigers are obligate carnivores and have specific nutritional needs that cannot be met by a purely plant-based diet, so feeding them only cereals would not be a healthy or appropriate long-term solution.
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So I am genuinely curious what drives such profoundly different experiences.
The proposed tests and competences are interesting; I would hope that they would be put to better use to map out the quite unexpected emergent abilities of the #LLM , to put it to good use, and to prepare ourselves (and our institutions) for #ChatGPT 's even more capable descendants.
I invite you to head over to https://sentientsyllabus.substack.com for some in depth analysis.
🙂
@boris_steipe interesting that for the same questions, different people get conceptually different responses. Would you comment on this? I would, but wanted to hear your interpretation
I think it is often overlooked that #ChatGPT is not an #AGI but a language model. To get non-trivial responses, one has to think how to phrase a request so it is part of a dialogue. Many abilities then become apparent; but if the request first has to pass through a level of abstraction that the #LLM was not trained for, it often gets confused.
That's really the essence of it: express your request as language.
@boris_steipe does this mean that you claim that a language model can handle performative knowledge (know-how) or proactive knowledge (we're limiting the discussion on the examples of riddles and counterfactuals)? I'm very confused about what you're trying to say with your first comment here
Yes, that's what I mean. If you can give me an example of each that would satisfy your definition, I'll be happy to demonstrate.
@boris_steipe but if so how is it not general intelligence? Do you mean that mastery of language is sufficient for reasoning, decision making, and conditionality? I still feel lost about this conversation, sorry
@boris_steipe then your idea of compositionality is very syntactical. I wouldn't agree that the whole is the sum of the parts, but would think that there's additional meaning by the fact these parts are put together. When I read about a frog and a goat together, I don't only think of the two animals, but also of what might bring them together and what might make one stand out next to the other. To ground it in some theory, I can relate it to phenomenography, where to understand a phenomenon, people rely not only on contrast (presence or absence of a feature, could be an object in your phrase), but also on separation, generalisation and fusion, i.e. how it interacts with its context. https://doi.org/10.1207/s15327809jls1502_2