Imagine an AI that doesn't just answer questions like ChatGPT, but can make your morning coffee, do the dishes and care for your elderly parent while you're at work.
It's the future first envisioned by The Jetsons in 1962, and thanks to developments in AI, it finally seems feasible within the next decade.
But the implications extend far beyond an in-home Jarvis. That's why tech titans like Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg want to take AI to this next level. Last month, he told The Verge his new goal is to build artificial general intelligence, or AGI. That puts him in the same league as ChatGPT-maker OpenAI and Google's DeepMind.
While Zuckerberg wants AGI to build into products to further connect with users, OpenAI and DeepMind have talked about the potential of AGI to benefit humanity. Regardless of their motivations, it's a big leap from the current state of AI, which is dominated by generative AI and chatbots. The latter have so far dazzled us with their writing skills, creative chops and seemingly endless answers (even if their responses aren't always accurate).
There is no standard definition for AGI, which leaves a lot open to interpretation and opinion. But it is safe to say AGI is closer to humanlike intelligence and encompasses a greater range of skills than most existing AIs. And it will have a profound impact on us.
But it has a long way to go before it fully emulates the human brain - not to mention the ability to make its own decisions. And so the current state of AGI could best be described as the Schrodinger's cat of AI: It simultaneously is and is not humanlike.
If you're wondering what all the fuss is about with AGI, this explainer is for you. Here's what you need to know.
Let's start with a term we've heard a lot in the last year: artificial intelligence. It's a branch of computer science thatsimulates aspects of human intelligence in machines.
Per Mark Riedl, professor in the Georgia Tech School of Interactive Computing and associate director of the Georgia Tech Machine Learning Center, AI is "the pursuit of algorithms and systems that emulate behaviors we think of as requiring intelligence."
That includes specific tasks like driving a car, planning a birthday party or writing code jobs that are already performed to a degree today by self-driving cars and more modest driving-assist features, or by assistants like ChatGPT if you give them the right prompt.
"These are things that we think that humans excel at and require cognition," Riedl added. "So any system that emulates those sorts of behaviors or automates those sorts of tasks can be considered artificial intelligence."
OpenAI's Dall-E 3 generative AI can create fanciful images like this spiky elecric guitar in front of a psychedelic green background. It uses GPT text processing to pump up your text prompts for more vivid, detailed results.
When an AI can perform a single task very well like, say, playing chess it's considered narrow intelligence. IBM's Watson, the question-answering AI that triumphed on Jeopardy in 2011, is perhaps the best-known example. Deep Blue, another IBM AI, was the chess-playing virtuoso that beat grandmaster Garry Kasparov in 1997.
But the thing about narrow intelligence is it can only do that one thing.
"It's not going to be able to play golf and it's not going to be able to drive a car," said Chirag Shah, a professor at the University of Washington. But Watson and Deep Blue can probably beat you at Jeopardy and chess, respectively.
Artificial general intelligence, on the other hand, is broader and harder to define.
AGI means a machine can do many things humans do or possibly all the things we do. It depends who you ask.
Human beings are the ultimate general intelligence because we are capable of doing so much: talking, driving, problem solving, writing and more.
Theoretically, an AGI would be able to perform these tasks indistinguishable from what Georgios-Alex Dimakis, a professor of engineering at the University of Texas, called "an extremely intelligent human."
But beyond the ability to match human proficiency, there is no consensus about what achievements merit the label. For some, the ability to perform a task as well as a person is in and of itself a sign of AGI. For others, AGI will only exist when it can do everything humans can do with their minds. And then there are those who believe it's somewhere in between.
Zuckerberg illustrated this fluidity in his interview with The Verge. "You can quibble about if general intelligence is akin to human-level intelligence, or is it like human-plus, or is it some far-future superintelligence," he said. "But to me, the important part is actually the breadth of it, which is that intelligence has all these different capabilities where you have to be able to reason and have intuition."
But the key is AGI is broad where AI is narrow.
The timeline for AGI is also up for debate.
Some say it's already here, or close. Others say it may never happen. Still more peg the estimate at five to 10 years DeepMind CEO Demis Hassabis is in this camp while yet others say it will be decades.
"My personal view is, no, it doesn't exist," Shah said.
He pointed to a March 2023 research paper from Microsoft, which referred to "sparks of AGI." The researchers said some of the conversations with recent large language models like GPT-4 are "starting to show that it actually understands things in a deeper way than simply answering questions," Shah said.
That means "you can actually have a free-form conversation with it like you would have with a human being," he added. What's more, the latest versions of chatbots like Google's Gemini and ChatGPT are capable of responding to more complex queries.
This ability does indeed point to AGI, if you accept the looser definition.
LLMs are a type of AI, fed content like books and news stories to first understand and then generate their own output text. LLMs are behind all the generative AI chatbots we know (and love?), like ChatGPT, Gemini, Microsoft Bing and Claude.ai.
What's interesting about LLMs is they aren't limited to one specific task. They can write poetry and plan vacations and even pass the bar exam, which means they can perform multiple tasks, another sign of AGI.
Then again, they are still prone to hallucinations, which occur when an LLM generates outputs that are incorrect or illogical. They are also subject to reasoning errors and gullibility and even provide different answers to the same question.
Hence the similarity to Schrodinger's cat, which in the thought experiment was simultaneously dead and alive until someone opened the box it was in to check.
This is perhaps the $100,000 question and another one that is hard to answer definitively.
If an AGI learns how to perform multiple household duties, we may finally have a Jetsons moment. There's also the potential for at-home assistants who understand you like a friend or family member and who can take care of you, which Shah said has huge potential for elder care.
And AGI will continue to influence the job market as it becomes capable of more and more tasks. That means more existing jobs are at risk, but the good news is new jobs will be created and opportunities will remain.
The short answer is no.
For starters, the ability to perform multiple tasks, as an AGI would, does not imply consciousness or self-will. And even if an AI had self-determination, the number of steps required to decide to wipe out humanity and then make progress toward that goal is too many to be realistically possible.
"There's a lot of things that I would say are not hard evidence or proof, but are working against that narrative [of robots killing us all someday]," Riedl said.
He also pointed to the issue of planning, which he defined as "thinking ahead into your own future to decide what to do to solve a problem that you've never solved before."
LLMs are trained on historical data and are very good at using old information like itineraries to address new problems, like how to plan a vacation.
But other problems require thinking about the future.
"How does an AI system think ahead and plan how to eliminate its adversaries when there is no historical information about that ever happening?" Riedl asked. "You would require planning and look ahead and hypotheticals that don't exist yet there's this big black hole of capabilities that humans can do that AI is just really, really bad at."
Dimakis, too, believes sentient robots killing us all has "a very low probability."
A much bigger risk is this technology ending up closed off within one or two big tech companies instead of being open like it is at universities.
"Having a monopoly or an oligopoly of one or two companies that are the only ones who have these new AI systems will be very bad for the economy because you'd have a huge concentration of technologies being built on top of these AI foundation models," Dimakis said. "And that is to me one of the biggest risks to consider in the immediate future."
AGI should not be confused with artificial super intelligence, which is an AI capable of making its own decisions. In other words, it is self-aware, or sentient. This is the AI many people fear now.
"You can think about any of these sci-fi stories and movies where you have robots and they have AI that are planning and thinking on their own," Shah said. "They're able to do things without being directed and can assume control completely on their own without any supervision."
But the good news is ASI is much further away than AGI. And so there's time to implement guardrails and guide or hinder its development.
That being said, Thorsten Joachims, a professor of computer science at Cornell, believes we will hold AI systems to higher standards than we hold ourselves and this may ultimately help us address some of society's shortcomings.
For example, humans commit crimes.
"We would never put up with it if an AI system did that," he said.
Joachims also pointed to decision-making, particularly in courts of law. Even well-educated and experienced professionals like judges pass down vastly different sentences for similar cases.
He believes we won't tolerate this kind of inconsistency in AI either. These higher standards will inform how AI systems are built and, in the end, they may not even look all that human.
In fact, AGI may ultimately help us solve problems we've long struggled with, like curing cancer. And even if that's the only thing a particular AI can do, that alone would be revolutionary.
"Maybe it cannot pass the Turing test" a standard method for assessing a computer's ability to pass as human "so maybe we wouldn't even consider it intelligent in any way, but certainly it would save billions of lives," said Adam Klivans, a professor of computer science at the University of Texas and director of the National Science Foundation's AI Institute for Foundations of Machine Learning. "It would be incredible."
In other words, AI can help us solve problems without fully mimicking human intelligence.
"These are not so much exactly AGI in the sense that they do what humans do, but rather they augment humanity in very useful ways," Dimakis said. "This is not doing what humans can do, but rather creating new AI tools that are going to improve the human condition."
View original post here:
There's AI, and Then There's AGI: What You Need to Know to Tell the Difference - CNET
- 'Godfather' of AI is now having second thoughts - The B.C. Catholic [Last Updated On: May 21st, 2023] [Originally Added On: May 21st, 2023]
- People warned AI is becoming like a God and a 'catastrophe' is ... - UNILAD [Last Updated On: May 21st, 2023] [Originally Added On: May 21st, 2023]
- Navigating artificial intelligence: Red flags to watch out for - ComputerWeekly.com [Last Updated On: May 21st, 2023] [Originally Added On: May 21st, 2023]
- Zoom Invests in and Partners With Anthropic to Improve Its AI ... - PYMNTS.com [Last Updated On: May 21st, 2023] [Originally Added On: May 21st, 2023]
- The Potential of AI in Tax Practice Relies on Understanding its ... - Thomson Reuters Tax & Accounting [Last Updated On: May 21st, 2023] [Originally Added On: May 21st, 2023]
- UK schools bewildered by AI and do not trust tech firms, headteachers say - The Guardian [Last Updated On: May 21st, 2023] [Originally Added On: May 21st, 2023]
- A glimpse of AI technologies at the WIC in N China's Tianjin - CGTN [Last Updated On: May 21st, 2023] [Originally Added On: May 21st, 2023]
- AI glossary: words and terms to know about the booming industry - NBC News [Last Updated On: May 21st, 2023] [Originally Added On: May 21st, 2023]
- Henry Kissinger says the U.S. and China are in a classic pre-World War I situation that could lead to conflict, but A.I. makes this not a normal... [Last Updated On: May 21st, 2023] [Originally Added On: May 21st, 2023]
- Programmed Values: The Role of Intention in Developing AI - Psychology Today [Last Updated On: May 21st, 2023] [Originally Added On: May 21st, 2023]
- Fear the fire or harness the flame: The future of generative AI - VentureBeat [Last Updated On: May 21st, 2023] [Originally Added On: May 21st, 2023]
- The Senate's hearing on AI regulation was dangerously friendly - The Verge [Last Updated On: May 21st, 2023] [Originally Added On: May 21st, 2023]
- Artificial intelligence GPT-4 shows 'sparks' of common sense, human-like reasoning, finds Microsoft - Down To Earth Magazine [Last Updated On: May 21st, 2023] [Originally Added On: May 21st, 2023]
- Why we need a "Manhattan Project" for A.I. safety - Salon [Last Updated On: May 21st, 2023] [Originally Added On: May 21st, 2023]
- What is AGI? The Artificial Intelligence that can do it all - Fox News [Last Updated On: May 21st, 2023] [Originally Added On: May 21st, 2023]
- Generative AI Thats Based On The Murky Devious Dark Web Might Ironically Be The Best Thing Ever, Says AI Ethics And AI Law - Forbes [Last Updated On: May 23rd, 2023] [Originally Added On: May 23rd, 2023]
- Artificial intelligence: World first rules are coming soon are you ... - JD Supra [Last Updated On: May 23rd, 2023] [Originally Added On: May 23rd, 2023]
- Today's AI boom will amplify social problems if we don't act now, says AI ethicist - ZDNet [Last Updated On: May 23rd, 2023] [Originally Added On: May 23rd, 2023]
- Artificial Intelligence May Be 'Threat' to Human Health, Experts Warn - HealthITAnalytics.com [Last Updated On: May 23rd, 2023] [Originally Added On: May 23rd, 2023]
- Amid job losses and fears of AI take-over, more tech majors are joining Artificial Intelligence race - The Tribune India [Last Updated On: May 23rd, 2023] [Originally Added On: May 23rd, 2023]
- Where AI evolves from here - Axios [Last Updated On: May 23rd, 2023] [Originally Added On: May 23rd, 2023]
- Parrots, paper clips and safety vs. ethics: Why the artificial intelligence debate sounds like a foreign language - CNBC [Last Updated On: May 23rd, 2023] [Originally Added On: May 23rd, 2023]
- How Microsoft Swallowed Its Pride to Make a Massive Bet on OpenAI - The Information [Last Updated On: May 28th, 2023] [Originally Added On: May 28th, 2023]
- Elon Musk on 2024 Politics, Succession Plans and Whether AI Will ... - The Wall Street Journal [Last Updated On: May 28th, 2023] [Originally Added On: May 28th, 2023]
- The AI Moment of Truth for Chinese Censorship by Stephen S. Roach - Project Syndicate [Last Updated On: May 28th, 2023] [Originally Added On: May 28th, 2023]
- Bard vs. ChatGPT vs. Offline Alpaca: Which Is the Best LLM? - MUO - MakeUseOf [Last Updated On: May 28th, 2023] [Originally Added On: May 28th, 2023]
- How AI and other technologies are already disrupting the workplace - The Conversation [Last Updated On: May 28th, 2023] [Originally Added On: May 28th, 2023]
- Meet PandaGPT: An AI Foundation Model Capable of Instruction-Following Data Across Six Modalities, Without The Need For Explicit Supervision -... [Last Updated On: May 28th, 2023] [Originally Added On: May 28th, 2023]
- AI education: Gather a better understanding of artificial intelligence with books, blogs, courses and more - Fox News [Last Updated On: May 28th, 2023] [Originally Added On: May 28th, 2023]
- 'Godfather of AI' says there's a 'serious danger' tech will get smarter than humans fairly soon - Fox News [Last Updated On: May 28th, 2023] [Originally Added On: May 28th, 2023]
- Israel aims to be 'AI superpower', advance autonomous warfare - Reuters.com [Last Updated On: May 28th, 2023] [Originally Added On: May 28th, 2023]
- Retail and Hospitality AI Revolution Forecast Model Report 2023 ... - GlobeNewswire [Last Updated On: May 28th, 2023] [Originally Added On: May 28th, 2023]
- 16 Jobs That Will Disappear in the Future Due to AI - Yahoo Finance [Last Updated On: May 28th, 2023] [Originally Added On: May 28th, 2023]
- What we lose when we work with a giant AI like ChatGPT - The Hindu [Last Updated On: May 28th, 2023] [Originally Added On: May 28th, 2023]
- Artificial general intelligence in the wrong hands could do 'really dangerous stuff,' experts warn - Fox News [Last Updated On: May 28th, 2023] [Originally Added On: May 28th, 2023]
- 5 things you should know about investing in artificial intelligence ... - The Motley Fool Australia [Last Updated On: June 17th, 2023] [Originally Added On: June 17th, 2023]
- Mint DIS 2023 | AI won't replace you, someone using AI will ... - TechCircle [Last Updated On: June 17th, 2023] [Originally Added On: June 17th, 2023]
- Satya Nadellas Oprah Moment: Microsoft CEO says he wants everyone to have an AI assistant - Firstpost [Last Updated On: June 17th, 2023] [Originally Added On: June 17th, 2023]
- Generative AI Will Have Profound Impact Across Sectors - Rigzone News [Last Updated On: June 17th, 2023] [Originally Added On: June 17th, 2023]
- Beware the EU's AI Regulations - theTrumpet.com [Last Updated On: June 17th, 2023] [Originally Added On: June 17th, 2023]
- Olbrain Founders launch blunder.one: Redefining Human Connections in the Post-AGI World - Devdiscourse [Last Updated On: June 17th, 2023] [Originally Added On: June 17th, 2023]
- Meet Sati-AI, a Non-Human Mindfulness Meditation Teacher Lions Roar - Lion's Roar [Last Updated On: June 17th, 2023] [Originally Added On: June 17th, 2023]
- How to Win the AI War - Tablet Magazine [Last Updated On: June 17th, 2023] [Originally Added On: June 17th, 2023]
- The Synergistic Potential of Blockchain and Artificial Intelligence - The Daily Hodl [Last Updated On: June 17th, 2023] [Originally Added On: June 17th, 2023]
- Dr. ChatGPT Will Interface With You Now - IEEE Spectrum [Last Updated On: July 11th, 2023] [Originally Added On: July 11th, 2023]
- Amazon tech guru: Eating less beef, more fish good for the planet, and AI helps us get there - Fox News [Last Updated On: July 11th, 2023] [Originally Added On: July 11th, 2023]
- Students who use AI to cheat warned they will be exposed as detection services grow in use - Fox News [Last Updated On: July 11th, 2023] [Originally Added On: July 11th, 2023]
- Crypto And AI Innovation: The London Attraction - Forbes [Last Updated On: July 11th, 2023] [Originally Added On: July 11th, 2023]
- AI would pick Bitcoin over centralized crypto Tether CTO - Cointelegraph [Last Updated On: July 11th, 2023] [Originally Added On: July 11th, 2023]
- What's missing from ChatGPT and other LLMs ... - Data Science Central [Last Updated On: July 11th, 2023] [Originally Added On: July 11th, 2023]
- 'Alarming' misuse of AI to spy on activists, journalists 'under guise of preventing terrorism': UN expert - Fox News [Last Updated On: July 11th, 2023] [Originally Added On: July 11th, 2023]
- Mastering ChatGPT: Introduction to ChatGPT | Thomas Fox ... - JD Supra [Last Updated On: July 11th, 2023] [Originally Added On: July 11th, 2023]
- Transparency is crucial over how AI is trained - and regulators must take the lead - Sky News [Last Updated On: July 11th, 2023] [Originally Added On: July 11th, 2023]
- Top 10 AI And Blockchain Projects Revolutionizing The World - Blockchain Magazine [Last Updated On: July 11th, 2023] [Originally Added On: July 11th, 2023]
- An Orb: the new crypto project by the creator of ChatGPT - The Cryptonomist [Last Updated On: July 11th, 2023] [Originally Added On: July 11th, 2023]
- AI must be emotionally intelligent before it is super-intelligent - Big Think [Last Updated On: July 11th, 2023] [Originally Added On: July 11th, 2023]
- NVIDIA CEO, European Generative AI Execs Discuss Keys to Success - Nvidia [Last Updated On: July 11th, 2023] [Originally Added On: July 11th, 2023]
- Tech Investors Bet on AI, Leave Crypto Behind - Yahoo Finance [Last Updated On: July 11th, 2023] [Originally Added On: July 11th, 2023]
- Its Going To Hit Like A Bomb: AI Experts Discuss The Technology And Its Future Impact On Storytelling KVIFF Industry Panel - Deadline [Last Updated On: July 11th, 2023] [Originally Added On: July 11th, 2023]
- AI tools trace the body's link between the brain and behavior - Axios [Last Updated On: July 11th, 2023] [Originally Added On: July 11th, 2023]
- Mission: Impossibles technology unpacked From AI to facial recognition - Yahoo Eurosport UK [Last Updated On: July 11th, 2023] [Originally Added On: July 11th, 2023]
- 27% of jobs at high risk from AI revolution, says OECD - Reuters [Last Updated On: July 11th, 2023] [Originally Added On: July 11th, 2023]
- AI likely to spell end of traditional school classroom, leading expert says - The Guardian [Last Updated On: July 11th, 2023] [Originally Added On: July 11th, 2023]
- AI humanoid robots hold UN press conference, say they could be more efficient and effective world leaders - Fox News [Last Updated On: July 11th, 2023] [Originally Added On: July 11th, 2023]
- China striving to be first source of artificial general intelligence, says think tank - The Register [Last Updated On: July 11th, 2023] [Originally Added On: July 11th, 2023]
- The Government's Role In Progressing AI In The UK - New ... - Mondaq News Alerts [Last Updated On: July 27th, 2023] [Originally Added On: July 27th, 2023]
- The AI Canon: A Curated List of Resources to Get Smarter About ... - Fagen wasanni [Last Updated On: July 27th, 2023] [Originally Added On: July 27th, 2023]
- Future of automotive journalism in India: Would AI take charge - Team-BHP [Last Updated On: July 27th, 2023] [Originally Added On: July 27th, 2023]
- OpenAI's Head of Trust and Safety Quits: What Does This Mean for ... - ReadWrite [Last Updated On: July 27th, 2023] [Originally Added On: July 27th, 2023]
- From vision to victory: How CIOs embrace the AI revolution - ETCIO [Last Updated On: July 27th, 2023] [Originally Added On: July 27th, 2023]
- Demis Hassabis - Information Age [Last Updated On: July 27th, 2023] [Originally Added On: July 27th, 2023]
- Why AI cant answer the fundamental questions of life | Mint - Mint [Last Updated On: July 27th, 2023] [Originally Added On: July 27th, 2023]
- This Health AI Startup Aims To Keep Doctors Up To Date On The ... - Forbes [Last Updated On: July 27th, 2023] [Originally Added On: July 27th, 2023]
- OpenAI Requires Millions of GPUs for Advanced AI Model - Fagen wasanni [Last Updated On: July 27th, 2023] [Originally Added On: July 27th, 2023]
- AI ethics experts warn safety principals could lead to 'ethicswashing' - Citywire [Last Updated On: July 27th, 2023] [Originally Added On: July 27th, 2023]
- AI bots could replace us, peer warns House of Lords during debate - The Guardian [Last Updated On: July 27th, 2023] [Originally Added On: July 27th, 2023]
- AI, Augmented Reality, The Metaverse | Media@LSE - London School of Economics and Political Science [Last Updated On: July 27th, 2023] [Originally Added On: July 27th, 2023]
- Will architects really lose their jobs to AI? - Dezeen [Last Updated On: July 27th, 2023] [Originally Added On: July 27th, 2023]
- Which US workers are exposed to AI in their jobs? - Pew Research Center [Last Updated On: July 27th, 2023] [Originally Added On: July 27th, 2023]
- AWS announces generative A.I. tool to save doctors time on paperwork - CNBC [Last Updated On: July 27th, 2023] [Originally Added On: July 27th, 2023]