Modern Australian
Men's Weekly

.

AI tools produce dazzling results – but do they really have ‘intelligence’?

  • Written by Paul Compton, Emeritus professor in Computer Science and Engineering, UNSW Sydney
an Impressionist painting of water lilies on a pond.

Sam Altman, chief executive of ChatGPT-maker OpenAI, is reportedly trying to find up to US$7 trillion of investment to manufacture the enormous volumes of computer chips he believes the world needs to run artificial intelligence (AI) systems. Altman also recently said the world will need more energy in the AI-saturated future he envisions – so much more that some kind of technological breakthrough like nuclear fusion may be required.

Altman clearly has big plans for his company’s technology, but is the future of AI really this rosy? As a long-time “artificial intelligence” researcher, I have my doubts.

Today’s AI systems – particularly generative AI tools such as ChatGPT – are not truly intelligent. What’s more, there is no evidence they can become so without fundamental changes to the way they work.

What is AI?

One definition of AI is a computer system that can “perform tasks commonly associated with intelligent beings”.

This definition, like many others, is a little blurry: should we call spreadsheets AI, as they can carry out calculations that once would have been a high-level human task? How about factory robots, which have not only replaced humans but in many instances surpassed us in their ability to perform complex and delicate tasks?

Read more: Not everything we call AI is actually 'artificial intelligence'. Here's what you need to know

While spreadsheets and robots can indeed do things that were once the domain of humans, they do so by following an algorithm – a process or set of rules for approaching a task and working through it.

One thing we can say is that there is no such thing as “an AI” in the sense of a system that can perform a range of intelligent actions in the way a human would. Rather, there are many different AI technologies that can do quite different things.

Making decisions vs generating outputs

Perhaps the most important distinction is between “discriminative AI” and “generative AI”.

Discriminative AI helps with making decisions, such as whether a bank should give a loan to a small business, or whether a doctor diagnoses a patient with disease X or disease Y. AI technologies of this kind have existed for decades, and bigger and better ones are emerging all the time.

Read more: AI is everywhere – including countless applications you've likely never heard of

Generative AI systems, on the other hand – ChatGPT, Midjourney and their relatives – generate outputs in response to inputs: in other words, they make things up. In essence, they have been exposed to billions of data points (such as sentences) and use this to guess a likely response to a prompt. The response may often be “true”, depending on the source data, but there are no guarantees.

For generative AI, there is no difference between a “hallucination” – a false response invented by the system – and a response a human would judge as true. This appears to be an inherent defect of the technology, which uses a kind of neural network called a transformer.

AI, but not intelligent

Another example shows how the goalposts of “AI” are constantly moving. In the 1980s, I worked on a computer system designed to provide expert medical advice on laboratory results. It was written up in the US research literature as one of the first four medical “expert systems” in clinical use, and in 1986 an Australian government report described it as the most successful expert system developed in Australia.

I was pretty proud of this. It was an AI landmark, and it performed a task that normally required highly trained medical specialists. However, the system wasn’t intelligent at all. It was really just a kind of look-up table which matched lab test results to high-level diagnostic and patient management advice.

There is now technology which makes it very easy to build such systems, so there are thousands of them in use around the world. (This technology, based on research by myself and colleagues, is provided by an Australian company called Beamtree.)

In doing a task done by highly trained specialists, they are certainly “AI”, but they are still not at all intelligent (although the more complex ones may have thousands and thousands of rules for looking up answers).

“There are now thousands of similar systems in use around the world, using a technology which makes it very easy to build such systems, provided by Beamtree, an Australian company” and originally based on research by myself and colleagues.“

The transformer networks used in generative AI systems still run on sets of rules, though there may be millions or billions of them, and they cannot easily be explained in human terms.

What is real intelligence?

If algorithms can produce dazzling results of the kind we see from ChatGPT without being intelligent, what is real intelligence?

We might say intelligence is insight: the judgement that something is or is not a good idea. Think of Archimedes, leaping from his bath and shouting "Eureka” because he had had an insight into the principle of buoyancy.

Generative AI doesn’t have insight. ChatGPT can’t tell you if its answer to a question is better than Gemini’s. (Gemini, until recently known as Bard, is Google’s competitor to OpenAI’s GPT family of AI tools.)

Or to put it another way: generative AI might produce amazing pictures in the style of Monet, but if it were trained only on Renaissance art it would never invent Impressionism.

an Impressionist painting of water lilies on a pond.
Nympheas (Waterlilies) Claude Monet / Google Art Project

Generative AI is extraordinary, and people will no doubt find widespread and very valuable uses for it. Already, it provides extremely useful tools for transforming and presenting (but not discovering) information, and tools for turning specifications into code are already in routine use.

These will get better and better: Google’s just-released Gemini, for example, appears to try to minimise the hallucination problem, by using search and then re-expressing the search results.

Nevertheless, as we become more familiar with generative AI systems, we will see more clearly that it is not truly intelligent; there is no insight. It is not magic, but a very clever magician’s trick: an algorithm that is the product of extraordinary human ingenuity.

Authors: Paul Compton, Emeritus professor in Computer Science and Engineering, UNSW Sydney

Read more https://theconversation.com/ai-tools-produce-dazzling-results-but-do-they-really-have-intelligence-223311

Engineered Timber Floors Melbourne: A Refined Flooring Choice For Modern Homes

Flooring decisions influence both the appearance and performance of a home for decades. As homeowners seek materials that balance natural beauty wit...

Whiteboard Systems Supporting Clear Thinking and Visual Planning

Effective communication often starts with making ideas visible. A whiteboard provides a clean, flexible surface where thoughts can be organised, share...

BMW Used Cars and the Appeal of Driving German Engineering

For drivers who value performance, comfort, and refined design, BMW used cars Melbourne offer an attractive way to experience premium motoring without...

Why Automatic Gates Melbourne are A Smarter Property Access

Security and convenience have become defining features of modern properties, and automatic gates Melbourne are increasingly seen as a practical sol...

The Importance Of Structured Commercial Office Cleaning In Busy Office Environments

Office spaces are dynamic environments where people collaborate, meet clients, and spend a significant portion of their day. Maintaining cleanliness...

Single Tooth Dental Implant for Natural Tooth Replacement and Lasting Stability

Losing a single tooth can have a noticeable impact on comfort, appearance, and confidence, which is why a Single Tooth Dental Implant is considered...

When Grief Doesn’t Follow a Timeline

Grief rarely moves in a straight line. It doesn’t follow stages neatly, and it doesn’t respond well to pressure — especially the quiet pressure ...

Steel Plate And Its Role In Modern Construction And Manufacturing

A steel plate is one of those materials that quietly holds the modern world together. It does not demand attention, yet it supports bridges, buildin...

Understanding Fat Transfer to the Breast: What to Know Before Considering the Procedure

Surgical options for breast enhancement have evolved over time, offering different approaches depending on a person’s goals and body type. One opt...

What to Do When Your Car’s Side Window Is Broken

A shattered side window is more than an inconvenience. Whether caused by a break-in, road debris, or accidental impact, it leaves your vehicle exposed...

Shopify Web Development and Shopify Website Development for Scalable Online Stores

Choosing the right platform is a crucial decision for any online business, and Shopify web development has become a popular choice for brands that ...

How a Burleigh Heads Plumber Tests for Pipe Leaks

Pipe leaks can be deceptively difficult to spot. Some announce themselves with a steady drip under the sink, but many develop quietly behind walls, ...

What Local Businesses Should Expect from IT Services in Melbourne?

If you run a Melbourne business with roughly 7–100 staff, you have probably noticed something over the last couple of years. The IT problems got m...

How Professional Cleaning Improves Indoor Air Quality

Indoor air quality (IAQ) plays a crucial role in our health, comfort, and overall wellbeing. Australians spend nearly 90% of their time indoors-at hom...

Solar and Solar Battery Systems: Powering Smarter Homes in Victoria

As energy prices continue to rise and sustainability becomes a priority for Australian homeowners, more families are investing in Solar and Solar Ba...

Plumbing Emergency Melbourne: What to Do When Every Minute Counts

A sudden plumbing issue can quickly turn into a major disaster if not handled promptly. From burst pipes and overflowing toilets to leaking gas line...

Why Older Melbourne Homes Require Detailed Building & Pest Inspections

Older homes make up a large part of Melbourne’s housing stock. Victorian terraces, Edwardian houses, Californian bungalows, and post-war brick hom...

7 Essential Tips for Choosing Reliable Moving Services in Perth

Moving to a new home or office can be exciting, but it also comes with stress, planning, and plenty of decisions. One of the most important choices yo...