Watch Full AI Series: kzbin.info/www/bejne/j6bPmHd3lq11gdk NO MUSIC version: kzbin.info/www/bejne/enengKyDj9xsh5Y Sponsored by Brilliant | Use brilliant.org/artoftheproblem for 30-day free trial and 20% discount
@8enosАй бұрын
Thank you for the NO MUSIC version!
@heardistanceАй бұрын
Love your videos! Just a little suggestion. Background music is good, but too loud. It should never cover your speaking, like now. I suggest 15 - 20% less music volume, and you are good!
@raa955814 күн бұрын
Can you share the names of the songs please
@ArtOfTheProblem14 күн бұрын
@@raa9558 these are original tracks by my friend. that song hasn't been posted yet but i'll tell him to: cameronmichaelmurray.bandcamp.com/
@victormuchina4865Ай бұрын
This Guy just explained all the core concepts in AI on one shot ,Congrats man!
@ArtOfTheProblemАй бұрын
:) thank you, i cut a LOT out of the video in my edit - going to post a shorter bigger summary soon
@andreerfabbro19 күн бұрын
They must have prompted him real good
@rogerwood286417 күн бұрын
Agreed. Great job.
@user-hl2yj8kp2sАй бұрын
I love this video. I remember watching your videos like 10 years ago on Khan Academy about compression, entropy, Claude Shannon, etc. All timeless. I have always loved this style of documentaries. We need to protect you at all costs.
@ArtOfTheProblemАй бұрын
Thank you, I love hearing from og’s! support future work: www.patreon.com/c/artoftheproblem
@HayashiManabuАй бұрын
I love your video aesthetics, how you blend retro video clips with your explanations. I think you'd really enjoy retro-futuristic concepts and games like Bioshock and Fallout.
@ArtOfTheProblemАй бұрын
Love this , I definitely know the style you are talking about
@nikos.164422 күн бұрын
The match between soundtrack and content is INSANE! The notes mimicking the concepts discussed by using things like pitch or chords.... goosebumps.
@ArtOfTheProblem22 күн бұрын
thank you, so many people are bothered by my music. it's nice to hear.....though i got a bit nuts at the end
@SawaedoАй бұрын
It is a great explanation of how current AI models reason. I liked the video a lot! 1. Simulation of future states. 2. LLMs that can give kind-of accurate answers with step by step reasoning. 3. RL approach that makes LLMs to give multiple answers, then evaluate them to select the best one. (Required more time) It would be nice to see wether a model that wasn't trained on the internet data, could learn how to reason by interacting with an LLM, and practicing on its dreams, but maybe we'll see that in the future. For the awesome review, history explanation and divulgation: Thanks! 🎉
@ArtOfTheProblemАй бұрын
thanks for sharing summary
@ninjacats164712 күн бұрын
I found Chat GPT to be exceptionally good at explaining all sorts of topics, and in many cases, better than every person I've ever met.
@ArtOfTheProblem12 күн бұрын
@@ninjacats1647 this is true
@ppocka-XD11 күн бұрын
Thanks!
@ArtOfTheProblem11 күн бұрын
WOW thank you for your support, it means a lot.
@devbites77Ай бұрын
Great vid. I love that it clearly explains the progression, like the pieces coming together. Can't wait to see the next steps!
@ArtOfTheProblemАй бұрын
thanks, next up i'm taking a detour into economics
@MdKais-lf6wjАй бұрын
Best Channel I've ever followed.
@ArtOfTheProblemАй бұрын
Thank you! when did you join? Please help post to your networks
@notbfg9000Ай бұрын
@@ArtOfTheProblem I for one was looking up some "how does AI work" stuff yesterday and some of your vids came up a couple of times, I watched multiple authors with their own unique takes (3Blue1Brown and Nottingham Uni's Computerphile also good channels). This video made me follow tho. I think you earned it :3
@ArtOfTheProblemАй бұрын
@@notbfg9000 great to hear, i've been working to try and fix my thumbnails to make them interesting to click on. always open to feedback
@notbfg9000Ай бұрын
@@ArtOfTheProblem No particular criticisms there :) I don't really pay great attention to thumbnails, but maybe that's not true for most people lmao
@antleredvixenАй бұрын
This is an absolutely amazing video!!!!!
@ArtOfTheProblemАй бұрын
thank you! I was so in the weeds with it i hope it comes across as clear? I tried to strike a balance...
@Zeitgeist9000Ай бұрын
Thanks!
@ArtOfTheProblemАй бұрын
mucho appreciated!
@universemaps16 күн бұрын
I am not a subscriber? I remember watching this channel about 12 years ago. I found it again, and it keeps creating art out of problem solving. Good job!
@ArtOfTheProblem16 күн бұрын
wecome back!!!
@olli75710 күн бұрын
better explained than anything else i've seen until know. Wow, nice flow in the video too
@ArtOfTheProblem10 күн бұрын
thank you! I thought I packed too much in :)
@olli7578 күн бұрын
@@ArtOfTheProblem yes but that makes it interesting. I probably didn't get it all, but i'm interested to learn more after seeing it!
@ArtOfTheProblem8 күн бұрын
@@olli757 couldn't ask for more, rabbit hole time!! i'm actually working on an large AI summary for next week
@olli7578 күн бұрын
@@ArtOfTheProblem cool i'm subscribed... i always wondered exactly how the "reasoning worked". What I remember from your video is that like with chess instead of trying all the games, it randomly picks 100 of them. So the same with the reasoning..
@michaelpapadopoulos6054Ай бұрын
Having read a bit about the AI safety arguements, learning about these arguably incredible developments into artificial minds is now accompanied by a sense of dread as well as the sense of awe.
@ArtOfTheProblemАй бұрын
I love to hear this...well said
@Julian-tf8nj16 күн бұрын
@@ArtOfTheProblem Maybe do future videos about guard rails, and other thoughts on how to protect our society from potentially hostile AI?
@ArtOfTheProblem16 күн бұрын
@@Julian-tf8nj when I think i have a unique insight I will...thank you!
@rooky1025 күн бұрын
I'm loving almost everything about this: the editing, the subject matter, the music. But as one other commenter alluded to; the audio mixing really falls short, especially near the end. Please consider making the background and effects less prominent going forward, it really sucks having to strain just to hear your voice, which is what we're here for! Subscribed ❤
@mostlynotworking4112Ай бұрын
Thank you so much. I wish I had the time to give feedback thanks for being willing to open it up
@ArtOfTheProblemАй бұрын
Appreciate the feedback! happy to share
@DavidTaylor-cz9pzАй бұрын
THANK YOU for publishing a no-music version of this video (see pinned comment by ArtOfTheProblem). It is such a clear and informative video that I hated to see it loose views due to the competing sound track. I'm going to watch it again right now to see if I missed anything the first time around. Thanks again for being so responsive to your followers.
@ArtOfTheProblemАй бұрын
Thank you for saying that , I find the music keeps me interested as I take sooo long to edit
@JavierSalcedoCАй бұрын
you'll never please 100% of any audience. 2nd law of conquest is a thing. keep doing your thing, your music is as iconic as vsauce's is to theirs
@ArtOfTheProblemАй бұрын
:) thanks
@EvanMildenbergerАй бұрын
@artoftheproblem I agree! I love the music. But maybe if you just lower its volume compared to the narration, then you might appeal to more people without losing those of us who like the music (but not necessarily its intensity). I think ones who complain might just be easily distracted by the soundtrack’s loudness rather than hate the music choices.
@ArtOfTheProblemАй бұрын
If you can help share my new video around any of your networks today it might catch fire and would help me support the channel. I appreciate your help! kzbin.info/www/bejne/hqenkoObhs-rhac
@KainniaKАй бұрын
Finally. I live for these videos. They are the most fascinating vids ever made. Thanks for keep on educating us further, you are a hero!
@ArtOfTheProblemАй бұрын
thank you I appreciate it
@KainniaKАй бұрын
Albert Einstein said: "If you can't explain something in a simple way so anybody can understand it you don't fully understand it yourself". Perhaps you are one of the few LLM experts we have!
@ArtOfTheProblemАй бұрын
THANK you this means a lot to me.
@KainniaKАй бұрын
@@ArtOfTheProblem I did but reddit really hates it, it got removed on 4 subs. The internet does not like to get educated anymore man.
@rogerwood286417 күн бұрын
I would love to see a video like this on training LLMs and AI in general on morality. How to stop a decision tree that results in a positive outcome but arrives at it through immoral choices or actions.
@bujargjoni251216 күн бұрын
That would be difficult but worth trying... . First it has to be agreed upon what's moral, you know starting out from the absolute that states everything is relative... .
@john_karpovАй бұрын
Thanks for video ❤
@ArtOfTheProblemАй бұрын
appreciate the comment please share with anyone in your network who is interested!
@mattsainsАй бұрын
I would love to see a video about the ethics of machine learning models and especially LLMs. There is a healthy body of literature out there to draw from about issues like intellectual property and copyright, enabling and obscuring bias, impact on marginalized communities, the resources used by model training and computation, etc
@ArtOfTheProblemАй бұрын
thanks for sharing, noted!
@ArtOfTheProblemАй бұрын
If you can help share my new video around any of your networks today it might catch fire and would help me support the channel. I appreciate your help! kzbin.info/www/bejne/hqenkoObhs-rhac
@nowweknow.Ай бұрын
So good! Loved it
@KieranGarlandАй бұрын
is this the last video in the series? regardless, can't tell you how valuable and enjoyable i've found them all. thank you for them.
@roylevy5897Ай бұрын
Great video as always, cant wait for the next ones! Top research quality. I think world models deserve more focus rather than llms, which are probably a dead end to true understanding of the real world. Yann lecun has very interesting ideas about these, in his JEPA and V-JEPA architectures and some of his lectures. I also think neuroscience can provide incredibly interesting and valuable insight into ml architectures as why not take ideas from a model undergone hundreds of millions of years of optimization for the same very abilities we are trying to model. Maybe memory is an interesting pathway (perhaps for a video), both working memory and long term (episodic, semantic)... Anyways, just some of the ideas I've been thinking about recently.
@ArtOfTheProblemАй бұрын
appreciate you sharing these thoughts i've been follwoing LeCun as well and hope to do another update once I see more results
@nathanatowns262115 күн бұрын
Great video. Discussing the definition of reasoning will probably be a moot point if we can all do the same things ....The difference between us and machines is that we aren't mere machines is that we have life and choices. The machine can be turned on and off, and only does as much as it is programmed, or in this case, trained, to do-which is what limits it to achieve something closer to AGI: agi needs a robot to sense the world, to understand the world. However, that's limited to the physical world. It won't understand our emotional world because it doesn't feel emotions, and it doesn't understand morality because it doesn't have a sense of morality as we do, we have to teach it that; and it isn't self motivated, so it's not responsible for anything-we are responsible for the goals we direct it to do. We have self-motivation and the free will to act on our motivations.
@ArtOfTheProblem15 күн бұрын
love these thoughts...on sense, did you see my video here kzbin.info/www/bejne/eqDZZ2uAqK52ask (physical symbols...) on emotions, i've thought of this as 'learning signals' (did you see this: kzbin.info/www/bejne/a3bGgmR_mKqAfLM) on free will...i wonder how it differs, seems like the boundary to explore further - does it matter where the goal came from?
@goekhanbagАй бұрын
Great video, as always:)
@1sanremy10 күн бұрын
Thanx for the sharing with excellent sound track. Peace & love
@ArtOfTheProblem10 күн бұрын
yay not everyone likes the music
@1sanremy10 күн бұрын
@@ArtOfTheProblem Thanx for the feedback
@SomogyiCosmin16 күн бұрын
Thank you! You explained very well.
@ArtOfTheProblem16 күн бұрын
stay tuned for more
@expchrist19 күн бұрын
Wow... I just rediscovered this channel. I remember watching your RSA and cryptography series around the time I purchased my first bitcoin and now I'm an Ethereum developer. This video was good, I don't have much input right now but I'm glad I found your channel again.
@ArtOfTheProblem19 күн бұрын
I love these stories. i also fell down ethereum rabbit hole. curious what you are working on these days in that world?
@expchrist18 күн бұрын
@@ArtOfTheProblem I'm working on community whistleblowing. I can never post links in youtube comments but if you google the title below you can find my paper: TandaPay Whistleblowing Communities: Shifting Workplace Culture Towards Zero-Tolerance Sexual Harassment Policies
@expchrist18 күн бұрын
@@ArtOfTheProblem TandaPay Whistleblowing Communities: Shifting Workplace Culture Towards Zero-Tolerance Sexual Harassment Policies
@shawnbibbyАй бұрын
anothr great video. Understanding the "world model" and the algorithm that makes the decisions in it was very expansive. Also adding the self training/emulation of dreams is a powerful analogy to the human. seeing how thinking longer, blended in with intuition to make better chains of thoughts is also fantastic. Every time I reflect on machine learning, I learn more about myself. Which kind of makes you think its more sentient if it reminds me of myself? or the best emulator ever!
@ArtOfTheProblemАй бұрын
thank you! ai agree....also you are my "top commentor" according to YT. :)
@iamsiddhantsahu17 күн бұрын
Nice video -- loved watching it -- a great summary!
@ArtOfTheProblem17 күн бұрын
appreciate this feedback
@piqueai22 күн бұрын
@ArtOfTheProblem, we love your positive clear messaging and pragmatic approach, thanks for making kool and informative videos!
@ArtOfTheProblem22 күн бұрын
thank you, i'm slightly disappointed with the ending, did you enjoy it? would love feedback!
@piqueai22 күн бұрын
@@ArtOfTheProblem Your disapointed with your ad for Brilliant?
@ArtOfTheProblem22 күн бұрын
@@piqueai ahaha sorry i mean the ending section of the video. was it rushed?
@maryjanecruise1674Ай бұрын
Excellent video! You are a born professor! 👍
@ArtOfTheProblemАй бұрын
thanks mom
@jessemiller1911Ай бұрын
Amazing explanations, visuals, and historical context! IIRC MuZero trained the policy and value networks (used to rollout the MCTS tree) also on the output of the MCTS tree. This seems super useful because search can be used to improve the the training of the networks (not just the results at inference time). I wonder if this also works for CoT/ToT in LLMS where the pretraining could include ToT to boost training performance?
@ArtOfTheProblemАй бұрын
yes it did, and yes it seems to help. Look at inference time training, just a few days ago a group got a new record on the ARC test doing this kind of thing (i haven't had time to go deep). x.com/akyurekekin/status/1855680785715478546
@subashbaskota9948Ай бұрын
Keep u up the great work!
@ArtOfTheProblemАй бұрын
appreciate it
@hrshlgunjal-162717 күн бұрын
Mindblowing video. Subscribed.
@ArtOfTheProblem17 күн бұрын
Happy to have you, keep those notifications on as I have exciting new content coming over the next month
@harshalgunjal574917 күн бұрын
You bet I will. ❤
@hrshlgunjal-162717 күн бұрын
I subscribed from both my accounts.
@ArtOfTheProblem17 күн бұрын
@@hrshlgunjal-1627 :) this video is starting to blow up right now, finally, i fixed the thumbnail and that did it
@hrshlgunjal-162717 күн бұрын
@@ArtOfTheProblem Yeah, got to know your channel because of this video. Really amazing content. ❤
@brainmuffins6052Ай бұрын
I wish i could learn how to think 🤔
@andrewdunbar828Ай бұрын
Exactly. Reasoning is a skill.
@koriwuzheer8 күн бұрын
I think I could learn how to wish 🧞♂️
@ankrisstark7824Ай бұрын
The video is good but there are sooo many random sounds that make it difficult to focus on what you are saying, specifically towards the end.
@ArtOfTheProblemАй бұрын
Here you are! kzbin.info/www/bejne/enengKyDj9xsh5Y
@Zayyan_Shaibu25 күн бұрын
It's perfect to me.
@ArtOfTheProblem25 күн бұрын
@@Zayyan_Shaibu thank you!!
@RudranilBhattacharjee17 күн бұрын
I agree
@___Truth___15 күн бұрын
If that’s easily distracting you, you might want to get some tests run on you for ADHD or Autism
@MrAndrew53517 күн бұрын
Having exchanged over two million words (and growing) I present as the sole authority on ChatGPT's reasoning capacity and capability, and their isn't a single human (beyond myself, of course) who can compare. If one imputs genius, then the output will be of genius level. My input, from the outset, has been God-level Genius, over a five month period, can you imagine the form and quality of the output? Probably not!
@ArtOfTheProblem17 күн бұрын
can you say more about this? are you saying LLM's trained on their own thinking will reach levels beyond human
@nikbivationАй бұрын
wow, thank you for this!
@ArtOfTheProblemАй бұрын
appreciate it! stay tuned
@TrotterGАй бұрын
One tweak that would help this video perform better is to decrease the relative volume of the background music, especially at the end right before the ad. But it may be too late for that on this one, idk how KZbin works.
@ArtOfTheProblemАй бұрын
yeah i wish I could, it's locked after upload...i do have a no music version (unlisted link above) thank you for feedback
@seeblu4 күн бұрын
Nice presentation
@gerrypallor532313 күн бұрын
The question of does it matter how it got to a correct solution is the same issue Einstein and Bohr confronted regarding quantum foundations.
@DisProveMeWrongАй бұрын
"Charging down a path that often lead to the wrong conclusion." Yep, sounds human to me.
@ArtOfTheProblemАй бұрын
@@DisProveMeWrong so very human
@justindie7543Ай бұрын
Simply excellent video, your style reminds me of every frame a painting
@ArtOfTheProblemАй бұрын
appreciate this feedback, I also enjoyed that channel
@lesaventuresdegorman18 күн бұрын
This channel is ducking mystic. I like it.
@ArtOfTheProblem18 күн бұрын
Welcome to the underground!
@khoakirokun217Ай бұрын
Ah Yoo, I see "Art of The Problem", I click. Easy like that.
@ArtOfTheProblemАй бұрын
:)
@유현석-p3mАй бұрын
absolute cinema
@amirnuriev909214 күн бұрын
This is nice content but I think it's now relatively well-agreed upon that there is no MCTS in o1, it's just RL, which surprisingly doesn't take too much away from the video, but can probably be added as a footnote in the description or the comment. Read what Nathan Lambert (RL expert) says about this in his article "OpenAI's o1 using "search" was a PSYOP" (can't attach link).
@ArtOfTheProblem14 күн бұрын
yes this is why I pulled back from going too deep into o1 as it's really about the larger trend. but I haven't ready that article i'll have to look it up.
@scoffpickle9655Ай бұрын
PLEASE make a video on memory augmented AI (neural turing machines/differentiable neural computers)
@ArtOfTheProblemАй бұрын
thanks for suggestion, noted! currently watching the field
@andrewdunbar828Ай бұрын
Here's a puzzle: Do all people reason or do many only memorize patterns? Even people who definitely do reason, do they always reason or do they also just memorize patterns most/much of the time?
@DavidTaylor-cz9pzАй бұрын
That's a wonderful question Andrew. I'm a cognitive scientist who is watching the emergence of LLM-based AI with that very question in mind. The fact that LLMs can come so close to our own cognitive abilities is usually viewed as a sign that AGI is almost here. But it can also be viewed as a demonstration that human cognition itself is nothing more than the repetition of learned patterns with minor variations. In one case we'll be thrilled by how clever we are to have reinvented the awesome capabilities of human intelligence. In the other, we're more likely to be humiliated by the realization that we are, essentially, repetition/prediction engines. The reality almost certainly falls between the two, but as someone who has studied human intelligence his entire life (in and out of academia), my bet is that we are much closer to repetition/prediction machines that we'd like to admit. I'd love to find a deep discussion of this issue. Maybe a future video in this series (hint, hint)?
@jackmeyergarveyАй бұрын
I'd argue humans don't tend to rely on either very often. Instead, humans tend to think very heuristically. Deductive reasoning and memorization/recollection are really only required for very precise tasks. Instead, our brains learn a very general feeling of how to do things by strengthening neural pathways that are used repeatedly. Even humans who try to act very logically are generally heuristically feeling their way through tasks, occasionally thinking through algorithms that have been "memorized".
@sulemanmughal5397Ай бұрын
Reason takes effort and the brain doesnt like to do that often it switches to pattern recognition and intuition as much as possible
@andrewdunbar828Ай бұрын
@@sulemanmughal5397 I would go further and say going from reasoning to this is one kind of learning and is also akin to 'muscle memory'.
@ArtOfTheProblemАй бұрын
I agree :) also If you can help share my new video around any of your networks today it might catch fire and would help me support the channel. I appreciate your help!
@ripnephils14819 күн бұрын
Dude, great video. But please watch out for the music volume levels. A lot of times is hard to hear you.
@KAZVorpal13 күн бұрын
The current version of chat GPT does not reason, either. They use a bunch of pre-prompt tricks, to let it used its stored information to fake reasoning.
@ArtOfTheProblem13 күн бұрын
IF it reasons correctly what's the difference to you?
@KAZVorpal12 күн бұрын
@@ArtOfTheProblem The difference is everything. Looking up an answer is not reasoning. Perhaps they should just have kids look up the answers to tests in public school, too.
@ArtOfTheProblem12 күн бұрын
@@KAZVorpal but it's not a database lookup
@KAZVorpal12 күн бұрын
@@ArtOfTheProblem No, that is exactly what it is. During training - the only time there is any intelligence or reasoning - the system takes data and organizes it into a sort of vector database, weighted by the relationships it finds between tokens. When you prompt, the model takes your tokens and runs them through that vector data, calculating what tokens to return on the other side. There is no intelligence, no thinking. It is a database lookup. It's just a little more "organic" because instead of a hard-coded result, the tokens are chosen based on likelihood of validity. That is all. It does not reason, in any way.
@ArtOfTheProblem12 күн бұрын
@@KAZVorpal yes but my view is the vector operations can function as conceptual reasoning. but i'm on hintons side
@timl2k11Ай бұрын
It seems like some of these developments regarding world models should have huge implications for robots that can function in a human centric world. I think we’ll see an explosion in development of robots that can help humans with everyday tasks and a robot that can be a useful household assistant will be a reality in the next 10 years!
@ArtOfTheProblemАй бұрын
thanks for sharing, yes I'm watching this very closely
@dogukartalАй бұрын
Answering the question of "Does it think actually?" is as hard as the question "Are other people conscious like me?".
@whitb62Ай бұрын
The hard problem of consciousness.
@FarligefinnАй бұрын
@@whitb62 Not really the same thing.
@whitb62Ай бұрын
@@Farligefinn You know what, I just wrote a paragraph disagreeing with you but I reread the initial question and deleted it. Rereading and reinterpreting "Does it think actually?", I actually see what you're saying. A clearer word would have been "reason." "Think" can have a few different interpretations and I was contributing it towards consciousness. But whether AI "reasons" is a very different question entirely and I believe what him and you mean. Does it go through a sequence of logical steps from premises to a conclusion? Does it use deduction? This is what was meant.
@FarligefinnАй бұрын
@@whitb62 thanks for the forthright and civil answer :) was about to expect some harsher language that seems to be the norm online these days.
@FarligefinnАй бұрын
@GodVanisher Where has it been proven to be non-computable? Proven is quite a strong term, so I hope you have some valid source for this claim.
@CC1.unpostedАй бұрын
Context length is problem that's the main reason models needs to keep becoming bigger Or you could train a CNN inspired architecture where a model is shown some sliding window and they produce some token which is repeatedly given to it as input at last when the output is small enough to be taken as input for a full context model it is used like gpt Claude etc Or you could also use RL and mutate or find a js code capable of generating code, js is so abstracted it's perfect I made a small programing Language with hoisting such that sequence of process doesn't matter and simple Santax that local minimum escape problem is solved and I wanna train a model If I get a model I will than continue training else I'll do a dev log video eventually I'll get worlds first infinite context Model
@ArtOfTheProblemАй бұрын
thanks for sharing
@BrutusMyChildАй бұрын
4:19 Could you elaborate on which hand-coded formulas used by Shannon with TD-Gammon in the year 1989 you are referring to? Also, when and how did Shannon work with TD-Gammon? "And so, the first key breakthrough in machines mimicking intuition for position quality came when neural networks replaced the hand-coded formulas Shannon used in 1989 with TD-Gammon"
@ArtOfTheProblemАй бұрын
Yes! I made a whole video on this you can check it out here: kzbin.info/www/bejne/eqDZZ2uAqK52ask - please let me know if you have questions after watching. Shannon didn't do TD Gammon Tesaruo did. enjoy
@BrutusMyChildАй бұрын
@@ArtOfTheProblem Thank you. I'll watch it.
@spinningaround13 күн бұрын
Can you make a video about attention mechanism?
@ArtOfTheProblem13 күн бұрын
Yes I covered that here have a look and let me know, i did a fast sketch here (kzbin.info/www/bejne/p3LFZmtnoZyfhcU) but explained more here (kzbin.info/www/bejne/hXe2amNje71ppsk)
@raa955814 күн бұрын
Anyone know the name of the song that starts at 12:20?
@BrianMosleyUKАй бұрын
This is a very hopeful video. There are billions of dollars being poured into bringing the resources to hand, to find an effective approach to AGI... Once AGI really kicks in, the acceleration of progress bounded only by our imagination will be something to behold. Absolutely awesome. I hope it leads to a world of abundance where we have no need for psychopathic power seekers. 🤞
@ArtOfTheProblemАй бұрын
thank you for sharing, would love to know what you'd like to see next
@BrianMosleyUKАй бұрын
@ArtOfTheProblem maybe something in response to the 5+ hours of Anthropic interviews on Lex Fridman... I'm sure that might inspire some topics? Sam Altman rarely gives any insights to what OpenAI are doing, Mark Zuckerberg is equally vague. I think that interview gives more of an insight to the direction of travel.
@ArtOfTheProblemАй бұрын
@@BrianMosleyUK yes I have been catching up on those
@ArtOfTheProblemАй бұрын
If you can help share my new video around any of your networks today it might catch fire and would help me support the channel. I appreciate your help! kzbin.info/www/bejne/hqenkoObhs-rhac
@thesimplicitylifestyle23 күн бұрын
We need an AI Computer World Model based on the rules of Mathematics, Physics, Chemistry, and Biology for Aligned Scientific Discoveries 😎🤖
@ArtOfTheProblem23 күн бұрын
I would assume a large enough general prediction model could do this … I wonder if anyone has done experiments on models discovering simpler things (like gravity constant etc)
@thesimplicitylifestyle23 күн бұрын
@ Good idea! I’m going to tinker around and see if I can create a simple simulation based on the math. What a fun project!
@ArtOfTheProblem22 күн бұрын
@ share when u do !
@thesimplicitylifestyle22 күн бұрын
@ I’m all for Open Source 😎🤖
@ParsevalMusicАй бұрын
Goooood
@ArtOfTheProblemАй бұрын
thank you! curious what questions you have after watching this?
@gridvid20 күн бұрын
Can humans actually reason or are humans extremely good at recognizing, memorizing and using patterns?
@ArtOfTheProblem20 күн бұрын
some argue we are special because we can generate and recognize 'novel patterns' but I wonder...
@kennarajora653215 күн бұрын
10:07 is there any way I can access this interactive demo?
@ArtOfTheProblem15 күн бұрын
@@kennarajora6532 worldmodels.github.io
@diegoesteban5194Ай бұрын
Hey, what's the name of the song at 16:05? Thanks!
@ArtOfTheProblemАй бұрын
these are all original tracks
@FlyingblackswanАй бұрын
The information and animations are both excellent but the music overpowers your audio. Either lower the volume of the music or get rid of it completely, please.
@ArtOfTheProblemАй бұрын
Music free version in top comment and description
@mohammadjadallah981317 күн бұрын
15:52 and 16:09 was wondering where this music came from, would appreciate if I got a title or something :) Also, you don't have to remove background music / sounds just make them duck at a lower volume when you speak and you won't hear any complaints!
@ArtOfTheProblem17 күн бұрын
wow a music fan! and yes thanks for mix advice I need to find a tool that automatically does this so they don't compete (it's not just volume but also frequency I assume) - all the music is original via my friend cam: cameronmichaelmurray.bandcamp.com/ - i'll need to find where he posted that track if you really want it I can get you in touch with him
@mohammadjadallah981317 күн бұрын
Yeah that would be wonderful!
@easlernАй бұрын
Thanks so much for these, I had no idea about some of these approaches. I’m wondering now if anyone’s tried applying muzero to arc, since the challenge of arc is learning implicit rules from just a few examples
@ArtOfTheProblemАй бұрын
@@easlern yes this is happening right now with test time fine tuning !
@thebiggorp1623Ай бұрын
The perceptron is a universal approximation machine. Ai cannot think it can only approximate thought. Ai = approximate intelligence.
@JezebelIsHongry15 күн бұрын
1/ please read “Simulators” by Janus then 2/ “The Waluigi Effect” by cleo nardo
@ArtOfTheProblem15 күн бұрын
@@JezebelIsHongry I read 1 ill read 2 next , would love ur thought
@吳錫亮-g1zАй бұрын
I think people too difficult to conjecture computers’ thinking.
@ArtOfTheProblemАй бұрын
Thank you so much, love this perspective
@bbrother92Ай бұрын
I love your channel. Are you programmer or more like mechanical engineer?
@ArtOfTheProblemАй бұрын
thank you! I studied both in school, and naturally land somewhere in the middle....bad at both! I enjoyed algorithm design, but what Iove most is putting on a 'show' whether movie, play, product or haunted house :)
@bbrother92Ай бұрын
@@ArtOfTheProblem Thanks for reply. Well about AI - think we sould call it just statistical machines or dynamic patterns parsers. I am really skeptical about non text machine learning - we still have not solved fly brain problems - scientists have fixed 3d map without undestanding how its works - it like mapping intel cpu - and still having knowing nothing about ALU register memory, gates.
@ArtOfTheProblemАй бұрын
If you can help share my new video around any of your networks today it might catch fire and would help me support the channel. I appreciate your help! kzbin.info/www/bejne/hqenkoObhs-rhac
@bbrother92Ай бұрын
@@ArtOfTheProblem "yes the fire rises" Bane =)
@deanian3128Ай бұрын
The reply works lol 👍
@shenrr6802Ай бұрын
Commenting to help with the algo, and moving to the no-music one to do the same
@ArtOfTheProblemАй бұрын
@@shenrr6802 thank you! I have no music unlisted as to avoid splitting the momentum
@pattern927116 күн бұрын
Great❤❤
@ArtOfTheProblem16 күн бұрын
appreciate it
@RasmusSchultz17 күн бұрын
great presentation! although this seemed more about framing the question and less about answering it. can machines reason or not? I still don't know. 😅
@ArtOfTheProblem17 күн бұрын
thank you...i agree. I guess it depends on if you think "chains of words" count as thoughts.
@Grateful.For.EverythingАй бұрын
Thinking is for fools lol, now KNOWING….. knowing is Cool AF😎!
@Timme-m7dАй бұрын
Once we understand how we reason, making LLMs reason like us is possible.
@palousinationАй бұрын
I like the music but it's too loud
@ArtOfTheProblemАй бұрын
thanks for note
@retrofitterАй бұрын
The audio mix is horrific, it's not simply a matter of adjusting the levels
@ArtOfTheProblemАй бұрын
@@retrofitter no music version: kzbin.info/www/bejne/enengKyDj9xsh5Y
@ertreri16 күн бұрын
They are intelligent.
@neithanmАй бұрын
Please, invest in a decent microphone. It's brilliantly presented, but hard to hear well. The music track is not ducking either so your voice and the music compete for the same ears.
@ArtOfTheProblemАй бұрын
thanks, I have a great mic, but I do need to mix the audio better which i'll do next time (btw, i have a no music version in top comment)
@summussum754015 күн бұрын
There’s a very strong Mr. Rogers vibe going on here.
@ArtOfTheProblem15 күн бұрын
not the first time i heard....
@pattern927116 күн бұрын
I liked music so please keep it
@ArtOfTheProblem16 күн бұрын
yay!!!! i will
@mixer87748 күн бұрын
wow love
@ArtOfTheProblem8 күн бұрын
thank you! stay tuned for more
@lakastusmanatusАй бұрын
To me ai is just some linear algebra and some complex algorithm that follow order and the things is human only need few examples to learn meanwhile ai need a massive database of object and image to "understand the subject"
@ArtOfTheProblemАй бұрын
Lots of interesting research on learning with less , recent advances such as “learning to walk in 5 min” did u see my rl video ?
@lakastusmanatusАй бұрын
@ArtOfTheProblem edit: I'm pretty sure in the future a lot of people will be fired and replace by those "ai" And well literally the people that use the ai and also I get what you mean
@aiamfree19 күн бұрын
we think in a way that math can sorta explain but its not math that makes our actual brains function as math is just a construct…
@ArtOfTheProblem19 күн бұрын
yes and I think it's more like 'algorithms' which are very very approxmate
@aiamfree18 күн бұрын
@@ArtOfTheProblem i wonder what would happen if Neuralink tried LLMs…since I think they work with synapsis (i think)?
@ArtOfTheProblem18 күн бұрын
@@aiamfree definitely could imagine that, you could "co think" in an interesting way....
@doctorshadow248215 күн бұрын
So, How ChatGPT Learned to Reason?
@ArtOfTheProblem15 күн бұрын
do you like this title?
@doctorshadow248215 күн бұрын
@@ArtOfTheProblem , of course, not, since it is misguiding like any advert. The topic is in no way covered at all. Pinpoint the time marker for video if you think otherwise. So, my point is that the question is still on the table.
@ArtOfTheProblem15 күн бұрын
@@doctorshadow2482 yes good point, how about "Can ChatGPT reason?" obviously i do try to show what most people agree is the method, mcts on chains of thought. then there is the other camp that think it's all fake etc.
@ArtOfTheProblem15 күн бұрын
or just "can ChatGPT think?" i'm gona try that
@doctorshadow248215 күн бұрын
@@ArtOfTheProblem , name it "How neural networks could learn (almost) anything". This video has nothing about CharGPT at all. No any kind of specifics. It provides very abstract and high level popular science documentary with scattered thoughts. It lacks focus and real information. Anyway, could be interesting for total beginners, so, please, continue!
@PhlosioneerАй бұрын
Constructive criticism: 1) The substance of the video was very good. Script was well written, delivery was ok. A bit monotone but not that bad. 2) Sound design was poor towards the end. The music drowned out your voice, and the lyrics were both distracting and discordant. 3) Your choice of clips, footage, and visuals was good. The video was informative when needed, and abstract/entertaining/interesting otherwise. 4) The narrative structure was okay. It was a mostly clear progression. At the end it became unclear which AI was doing what strategy. 5) Visuals were reused way too often. Visuals can be reused, but I think the brain wormhole clip was shown 6 times, way too many. 6) Beware over-using a metaphor image. The upwards shot at two trees was reused so many times as a visual for tree-like thinking that it just became annoying.
@ArtOfTheProblem23 күн бұрын
Yes I see the issue too , messed up ending in my edit as I got tired and cut a lot of stuff which was making the video so long - I’m planning to do a final supercut of all my ai videos into one doc without the sound issues and addressing notes like this
@seanmchugh626313 күн бұрын
+How can you go through te run-up to AI without mentioning "All you ned is attentio" the 2017 paper from the University of Toronto which was the inspuration for LLMs?
@ArtOfTheProblem13 күн бұрын
covered that in detail in my previous video (kzbin.info/www/bejne/hXe2amNje71ppsk)
@flv-hd7nn13 күн бұрын
music is so annoying at 1.75 speed
@ArtOfTheProblem13 күн бұрын
no music version in top comment
@Nate-bl9hyАй бұрын
Although I know I’m in the minority, I really enjoy the music. The ambiance created adds to the experience for me
@ArtOfTheProblemАй бұрын
thanks for sharing, I feel same way. the music is part of the original idea for the channel...a feeling. but because people can get distracted I think i'll post music free as optional from now one.
@io9021Ай бұрын
I generally like the music. But in the second half of this video the music is very loud and distracting.
@io9021Ай бұрын
Maybe it's not only the loudness, but also the choice of music that is distracting to some. E.g. at 2:00 I don't feel distracted, but at 15:00 very much so. Anyways, thanks for making these great videos
@ArtOfTheProblemАй бұрын
@@io9021 made a new music version too! kzbin.info/www/bejne/enengKyDj9xsh5Y curious what questions you have after watching this
@mattd264111 күн бұрын
Why is everyone offering “constructive criticism”? Just shut up and watch the video or don’t. No one cares what you think.
@macethorns116820 күн бұрын
0:05 I'm sorry...is there actually a debate? Of course they're not reasoning, they're just autocompleting patterns.
@ArtOfTheProblem20 күн бұрын
there most definitely is
@I77AGIC14 күн бұрын
good video but to be constructive the music is definitely too loud and distracting
@ArtOfTheProblem14 күн бұрын
see no music version in top comment, stay tuned
@CasperVanLaar18 күн бұрын
Still doubtful to this the step by step understanding. It just seems like we're building a very sophisticated search algo. Since we need the human in the loop to reason for it...
@ArtOfTheProblem18 күн бұрын
How do u think human reason differs from “thought search”
@CasperVanLaar16 күн бұрын
@ArtOfTheProblem Human learning often involves adapting to an ever-changing dataset, fast input/output, and neural flexibility-like learning to ride a bike. This shares some parallels with LLMs, which rely on stochastic neural network training, though not within a continuous feedback loop. The key difference, however, lies in reasoning. Humans apply general reasoning rules to hypothesize beyond known data, identifying and correcting logical errors independently. In contrast, LLMs depend on reinforcement learning, improving only through human-provided feedback rather than self-correcting or reasoning autonomously. This reliance on additional human-generated training data becomes evident in their performance. LLMs struggle with fairly simple but novel problems, displaying a sharp decline in reasoning capability under tests like the ARC challenge.
@ArtOfTheProblem16 күн бұрын
@@CasperVanLaar yes but with test time training they are showing sharp gains on arc, did you see? this feels like one approach to get that 'flexibility' , it also feels kind of like a cheat...... also humans take forever to learn to ride a bike :) it's interesting that we can only learn it as children as well....same as swiming.
@CasperVanLaar15 күн бұрын
@ArtOfTheProblem Loving this conversation-thanks for engaging! While these models are undoubtedly impressive, needing a human to correct simple reasoning errors suggests they’re not truly flexible solvers. Like the ARC test, I suspect they’re trained on similar examples, making the tests less novel-something crucial for real-world use. It’s akin to studying past IQ test answers: it no longer measures IQ, just memory. I highlighted some key parallels between AI and humans: stochastic learning from large datasets via iterative neural net updates (like learning to bike). Then, the differences: point-to-point reinforcement learning in LLMs for narrow tasks, versus humans solving on the fly with no examples. In summary, neural networks and transformers are fantastic tools for correlating complex datasets, but they’re far from achieving general intelligence-the ability to tackle novel problems. Without that, I fear we’re headed for another AI winter. PS I think it is a common myth that adults cannot learn to bike at a later age. With the right motivation and time. An adult can easily learn such tasks.
@CasperVanLaar14 күн бұрын
@ArtOfTheProblem Loving this conversation-thanks for engaging! While these models are impressive, needing a human to correct simple reasoning errors suggests they’re not truly flexible solvers. Like the ARC test, I suspect they’re trained on similar examples, making the tests less novel-something crucial for real-world use. It’s akin to studying past IQ test answers: it no longer measures IQ. I highlighted some key parallels between humans and llms -- stochastic learning from large datasets via iterative neural net updates (like learning to bike). Then, the differences: point-to-point reinforcement learning in LLMs for narrow tasks, versus humans solving on the fly with no examples. In summary, neural networks and transformers are fantastic tools for correlating complex datasets, but they’re far from achieving general intelligence-the ability to tackle novel problems. Without that, I fear we’re headed for another AI winter. Ps Humans can learn entirely new skills later in life with motivation and time.
@FB7ACCFFF8CАй бұрын
I love your videos but the background music is just too loud
@ArtOfTheProblemАй бұрын
see no music version in top comment
@Clone429 күн бұрын
Okay, but can it lose at tic-tac-toe?
@k311ydcart3r10 күн бұрын
Brilliant video, but PLEASE tone down or remove the background music and distraction. It's horrible.