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by ClaraForm
281 days ago
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Hey, I know what the article wanted to say, see the last two-ish sentences of my previous response. My point, is that the article might be mis-interpreting what the causes and solutions for the problems it sees. Relying on the brain as an example of how to improve might be a mistaken premise, because maybe the brain isn't doing what the article thinks it's doing. So we're in agreement there, that the brain and LLMs are incomparable, but maybe the parts where they're comparable are more informative on the nature of hallucinations than the author may think. |
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* Continuously updates its state based on sensory data
* Retrieves/gathers information that correlates strongly with historic sensory input
* Is able to associate propositions with specific instances of historic sensory input
* Uses the above two points to verify/validate its belief in said propositions
Describing how memories "feel" may confuse the matter, I agree. But I don't think we should be quick to dismiss the argument.