AI Isn’t Smarter Than a Baby—Yet

https://media.wired.com/photos/6a56a73aa8c3319e5ecf8c80/191:100/w_1280,c_limit/AI-Lab-AI-Still-Isnt-Smarter-Than-a-Baby-Business.jpg

If you think an artificial intelligence model running on thousands of cutting-edge computer chips is smart, allow me to introduce you to the concept of a 1-year-old.

OK, so babies might not be able to write computer programs, solve advanced math problems, or debate philosophical ideas. But unlike today’s AI models, which consume an ocean’s worth of training data and as much energy as a small country, babies learn to make sense of the world with amazing efficiency. They identify new objects after seeing them once or twice, and they learn through fleeting observation and physical interaction.

When it comes to improving AI, babies—and the architecture of their brains—might hold crucial insights. Building a more baby-like version of AI could make frontier models less costly and less energy intensive, and it might also be valuable if AI-powered robots are to learn about their environments in a more natural way.

...

Copyright of this story solely belongs to wired.com. To see the full text click HERE

Read more