| It's extremely obvious to anyone who works on real systems. > (after all, we don't even really understand most of the mechanics on either side, human and ai) We don't need mechanistic explanations to observe radical differences in behavior, and there are mechanistic explanations for some of these differences. Eg, CNNs and the visual cortex. We really do understand some mechanisms -- of both CNNs and VCs -- well enough to understand divergences in failure modes. Adversarial examples, for example. > Sure, it's easy enough to make mechanistic arguments, but that doesn't mean it will matter in the slightest when we evaluate the outcome in regards to any metric we care about. I can't quite figure out what this sequence of tokens is supposed to mean. Anyways, again, the failure modes of LLMs are obviously different than the failure modes of humans. Anyone who has spent even a trivial amount of time training both will instantly observe that this is true. |