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Saturday, April 29, 2023

The Machine Religion - 5


When humans hallucinate how is that different from when machines hallucinate?

That question brings to mind the time Woody Allen was told that photons have mass.

He replied "What? I didn't even know they were Catholic!"

But I digress.

Is there a distinction without a difference here:

"In artificial intelligence (AI), a hallucination or artificial hallucination (also occasionally called confabulation or delusion) is a confident response by an AI that does not seem to be justified by its training data. For example, a hallucinating chatbot with no training data regarding Tesla's revenue might internally generate a random number (such as "$13.6 billion") that the algorithm ranks with high confidence, and then go on to falsely and repeatedly represent that Tesla's revenue is $13.6 billion, with no provided context that the figure was a product of the weakness of its generation algorithm.

Such phenomena are termed "hallucinations", in analogy with the phenomenon of hallucination in human psychology. Note that while a human hallucination is a perception by a human that cannot sensibly be associated with the portion of the external world that the human is currently directly observing with sense organs, an AI hallucination is instead a confident response by an AI that cannot be grounded in any of its training data."

(Hallucination, artificial intelligence). So, get in touch with your inner machine ... check out:

Putting A Face On Machine Mutation, 2, 3, 4
The Machine Religion, 2, 3, 4
The New Paradigm: The Physical Universe Is Mostly Machine, 2, 3
Did Abiotic Intelligence Precede Biotic Intelligence?

Hallucinations are not just for machines anymore.

The next post in this series is here, the previous post in this series is here.





2 comments:

  1. "Hallucinations are not just for machines anymore." Neither is crime (Link).

    ReplyDelete
  2. "Geoffrey Hinton, who has been called the ‘Godfather of AI,’ confirmed Monday that he left his role at Google last week to speak out about the “dangers” of the technology he helped to develop" (CNN).

    ReplyDelete