AI Rhymes like Snoop Dogg
OpenAI recently released a GPT 3.5 chatbot, which can produce text in the form of conversation, answer follow-up questions, admit its own admittance, challenge wrongful assumptions, decline indecent proposals. It is similar to InstructGPT, which is a newer GPT-3 model, that can follow instructions promptly and give detailed feedback.
The ChatGPT algorithm is used for the creation of digital content , writing or code debugging, communication with customers. It was trained through Reinforcement Learning from Human Feedback (RLHF) with the same methods as InstructPPT was with the only difference of data collection. They say, people that participated in the AI design prepared conversations, in which people played both sides - the customer (user) and the machine (AI). The people were given access to the machine-written proposals to assist the machine to write its own responses.
AI would respond and its responses would be randomly ranked by human trainers for quality. That’s how the reward model for reinforcement learning was created.
ChatGPT appears to comprehend word and sentence arrangement, it also utilizes rhymes as well as syllables to produce songs and write poems. Check out the Snoop Dogg style of explaining quantum theory , which one Twitter user asked ChatGPT to do.
Even though it’s not as catchy as the rapper’s “Affirmation song”, it clearly demonstrates the creativity of the machine’s mixing general data and songwriting of a particular style.
There may be concerns about AI replacing humans (writers, essay writing, etc), however there’ not much to be afraid of. The machine has its own limitations, like incorrect answers or answers that make no sense. There are also issues with uneven responses to minor changes in input phrasing, ignorance with answering questions, answering correctly when a question is delicately rephrased. It is overwordy, etc. The model can also reply to unsafe instructions or bias. So, more teaching and training are required for AI to work efficiently.
AI Catalog's chief editor