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Search resuls for: "Ellie Pavlick"


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The technology’s reliance on statistical pattern prediction also means that most chatbots join words and phrases that they recognize from training data as often being correlated. “What allows it to appear so intelligent is that it can make connections that aren’t explicitly written down,” she said. Similarly, OpenAI said users could inform the company when ChatGPT responded inaccurately. OpenAI trainers can then vet the critique and use it to fine-tune the model to recognize certain responses to specific prompts as better than others. Meta said its open-source release allowed a broad community of users to help identify and fix its vulnerabilities.
Persons: Ellie Pavlick, , Bing, OpenAI, ChatGPT, Meta Organizations: Brown University, Microsoft, Meta
To figure out what GPT-4 has read, they quizzed it on its knowledge of various books, as if it were a high-school English student. One way to answer the question is to look for information that could have come from only one place. Genre — sci-fi, mystery, romance, horror — is, broadly speaking, more interesting, partially because these books have plots where things actually happen. Bamman's GPT-4 list is a Borgesian library of episodic connections, cliffhangers, third-act complications, and characters taking arms against seas of troubles (and whales). See what a bot makes of Gene Wolfe's "The Book of the New Sun," maybe, or Sheri Tepper's "Grass."
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