GPT4 is smarter than most people
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@jon-nyc I'm guessing a lot of people could do pretty well if they had full internet access during the exams.
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This makes a ton of sense though. What these models are good at is synthesizing and summarizing existing knowledge and data.
Tests are 100% solved things with no creativity required.
A standard test question seems easier to answer than a truly novel, new question that no one has thought of before.
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Let's give it a real world test, though. For example, what if you were at a corporate birthday party and they were handing out slices of cake and you received the last slice of cake to pass on noticing that everyone else had a slice except the person you're supposed to hand the slice to. Do you keep the slice for yourself, pass it on, or start googling for Office Space GIFs?
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This makes a ton of sense though. What these models are good at is synthesizing and summarizing existing knowledge and data.
Tests are 100% solved things with no creativity required.
A standard test question seems easier to answer than a truly novel, new question that no one has thought of before.
@xenon said in GPT4 is smarter than most people:
This makes a ton of sense though. What these models are good at is synthesizing and summarizing existing knowledge and data.
Tests are 100% solved things with no creativity required.
A standard test question seems easier to answer than a truly novel, new question that no one has thought of before.
Like saying it's not surprising that a calculator performs better than most (all?) humans in arithmetic tests.
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Let's give it a real world test, though. For example, what if you were at a corporate birthday party and they were handing out slices of cake and you received the last slice of cake to pass on noticing that everyone else had a slice except the person you're supposed to hand the slice to. Do you keep the slice for yourself, pass it on, or start googling for Office Space GIFs?
@89th said in GPT4 is smarter than most people:
Let's give it a real world test, though. For example, what if you were at a corporate birthday party and they were handing out slices of cake and you received the last slice of cake to pass on noticing that everyone else had a slice except the person you're supposed to hand the slice to. Do you keep the slice for yourself, pass it on, or start googling for Office Space GIFs?
Etiquette tests? If the training data included enough material from etiquette advice columns, the AI will likely ace those too.
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@89th said in GPT4 is smarter than most people:
Let's give it a real world test, though. For example, what if you were at a corporate birthday party and they were handing out slices of cake and you received the last slice of cake to pass on noticing that everyone else had a slice except the person you're supposed to hand the slice to. Do you keep the slice for yourself, pass it on, or start googling for Office Space GIFs?
Etiquette tests? If the training data included enough material from etiquette advice columns, the AI will likely ace those too.
@Axtremus said in GPT4 is smarter than most people:
@89th said in GPT4 is smarter than most people:
Let's give it a real world test, though. For example, what if you were at a corporate birthday party and they were handing out slices of cake and you received the last slice of cake to pass on noticing that everyone else had a slice except the person you're supposed to hand the slice to. Do you keep the slice for yourself, pass it on, or start googling for Office Space GIFs?
Etiquette tests? If the training data included enough material from etiquette advice columns, the AI will likely ace those too.
Well, Ax failed. Who else is surprised?
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Let's give it a real world test, though. For example, what if you were at a corporate birthday party and they were handing out slices of cake and you received the last slice of cake to pass on noticing that everyone else had a slice except the person you're supposed to hand the slice to. Do you keep the slice for yourself, pass it on, or start googling for Office Space GIFs?
@89th said in GPT4 is smarter than most people:
Let's give it a real world test, though. For example, what if you were at a corporate birthday party and they were handing out slices of cake and you received the last slice of cake to pass on noticing that everyone else had a slice except the person you're supposed to hand the slice to. Do you keep the slice for yourself, pass it on, or start googling for Office Space GIFs?
I'd pass the cake on and make pointed remarks about the obesity epidemic.
Then I'd spend the afternoon with my Russian friend, having a nice chat with HR.
Maybe I'm a sociopath.