| I will never stop being amazed at AI folks' childish views of animal cognition: > A lot of your tools reference crows. What’s up with that? > White: When I got started in this space around October 2022, I was red-teaming with GPT4. Around the same time, a paper called “Language Models are Stochastic Parrots” was circulating, and people were debating whether these models were just regurgitating their training data or truly reasoning. The analogy is appealing, and parrots are definitely known for mimicking speech. But what we saw was that pairing these language models with external tools made them much more accurate — a bit like crows, which can use tools to solve puzzles. > In the work that led to ChemCrow,1 for instance, we found that giving the large language model access to calculators or chemistry software made its answers much better. So we kind of retconned a little bit to make “Crows” be agents that can interact with tools using natural language. This is incredibly insulting to crows, who can spontaneously create tools and use bizarre man-made tools with no training. And when crows use tools for problem solving in the lab, the tools are not "solve the problem for me" like a calculator, they require much more creative thinking. What White really means - whether he knows it or not - is that crows are known for being intelligent and he wants to use this for marketing purposes. I don't think anyone alive today will live to see an AI as smart as a crow, in no small part because AI researchers and investors refuse to take animal intelligence seriously. |