Current:Home > FinanceChatbots sometimes make things up. Not everyone thinks AI’s hallucination problem is fixable -MoneyStream
Chatbots sometimes make things up. Not everyone thinks AI’s hallucination problem is fixable
SignalHub View
Date:2025-04-09 07:29:25
Spend enough time with ChatGPT and other artificial intelligence chatbots and it doesn’t take long for them to spout falsehoods.
Described as hallucination, confabulation or just plain making things up, it’s now a problem for every business, organization and high school student trying to get a generative AI system to compose documents and get work done. Some are using it on tasks with the potential for high-stakes consequences, from psychotherapy to researching and writing legal briefs.
“I don’t think that there’s any model today that that doesn’t suffer from some hallucination,” said Daniela Amodei, co-founder and president of Anthropic, maker of the chatbot Claude 2.
“They’re really just sort of designed to predict the next word,” Amodei said. “And so there will be some rate at which the model does that inaccurately.”
Anthropic, ChatGPT-maker OpenAI and other major developers of AI systems known as large language models say they’re working to make them more truthful.
How long that will take — and whether they will ever be good enough to, say, safely dole out medical advice — remains to be seen.
“This isn’t fixable,” said Emily Bender, a linguistics professor and director of the University of Washington’s Computational Linguistics Laboratory. “It’s inherent in the mismatch between the technology and the proposed use cases.”
A lot is riding on the reliability of generative AI technology. The McKinsey Global Institute projects it will add the equivalent of $2.6 trillion to $4.4 trillion to the global economy. Chatbots are only one part of that frenzy, which also includes technology that can generate new images, video, music and computer code. Nearly all of the tools include some language component.
Google is already pitching a news-writing AI product to news organizations, for which accuracy is paramount. The Associated Press is also exploring use of the technology as part of a partnership with OpenAI, which is paying to use part of AP’s text archive to improve its AI systems.
In partnership with India’s hotel management institutes, computer scientist Ganesh Bagler has been working for years to get AI systems, including a ChatGPT precursor, to invent recipes for South Asian cuisines, such as novel versions of rice-based biryani. A single “hallucinated” ingredient could be the difference between a tasty and inedible meal.
When Sam Altman, the CEO of OpenAI, visited India in June, the professor at the Indraprastha Institute of Information Technology Delhi had some pointed questions.
“I guess hallucinations in ChatGPT are still acceptable, but when a recipe comes out hallucinating, it becomes a serious problem,” Bagler said, standing up in a crowded campus auditorium to address Altman on the New Delhi stop of the U.S. tech executive’s world tour.
“What’s your take on it?” Bagler eventually asked.
Altman expressed optimism, if not an outright commitment.
“I think we will get the hallucination problem to a much, much better place,” Altman said. “I think it will take us a year and a half, two years. Something like that. But at that point we won’t still talk about these. There’s a balance between creativity and perfect accuracy, and the model will need to learn when you want one or the other.”
But for some experts who have studied the technology, such as University of Washington linguist Bender, those improvements won’t be enough.
Bender describes a language model as a system for “modeling the likelihood of different strings of word forms,” given some written data it’s been trained upon.
It’s how spell checkers are able to detect when you’ve typed the wrong word. It also helps power automatic translation and transcription services, “smoothing the output to look more like typical text in the target language,” Bender said. Many people rely on a version of this technology whenever they use the “autocomplete” feature when composing text messages or emails.
The latest crop of chatbots such as ChatGPT, Claude 2 or Google’s Bard try to take that to the next level, by generating entire new passages of text, but Bender said they’re still just repeatedly selecting the most plausible next word in a string.
When used to generate text, language models “are designed to make things up. That’s all they do,” Bender said. They are good at mimicking forms of writing, such as legal contracts, television scripts or sonnets.
“But since they only ever make things up, when the text they have extruded happens to be interpretable as something we deem correct, that is by chance,” Bender said. “Even if they can be tuned to be right more of the time, they will still have failure modes — and likely the failures will be in the cases where it’s harder for a person reading the text to notice, because they are more obscure.”
Those errors are not a huge problem for the marketing firms that have been turning to Jasper AI for help writing pitches, said the company’s president, Shane Orlick.
“Hallucinations are actually an added bonus,” Orlick said. “We have customers all the time that tell us how it came up with ideas — how Jasper created takes on stories or angles that they would have never thought of themselves.”
The Texas-based startup works with partners like OpenAI, Anthropic, Google or Facebook parent Meta to offer its customers a smorgasbord of AI language models tailored to their needs. For someone concerned about accuracy, it might offer up Anthropic’s model, while someone concerned with the security of their proprietary source data might get a different model, Orlick said.
Orlick said he knows hallucinations won’t be easily fixed. He’s counting on companies like Google, which he says must have a “really high standard of factual content” for its search engine, to put a lot of energy and resources into solutions.
“I think they have to fix this problem,” Orlick said. “They’ve got to address this. So I don’t know if it’s ever going to be perfect, but it’ll probably just continue to get better and better over time.”
Techno-optimists, including Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates, have been forecasting a rosy outlook.
“I’m optimistic that, over time, AI models can be taught to distinguish fact from fiction,” Gates said in a July blog post detailing his thoughts on AI’s societal risks.
He cited a 2022 paper from OpenAI as an example of “promising work on this front.”
But even Altman, at least for now, doesn’t count on the models to be truthful.
“I probably trust the answers that come out of ChatGPT the least of anybody on Earth,” Altman told the crowd at Bagler’s university, to laughter.
veryGood! (33)
Related
- Friday the 13th luck? 13 past Mega Millions jackpot wins in December. See top 10 lottery prizes
- Jennifer Lopez, Sofia Richie and More Stars Turn Heads at Ralph Lauren's NYFW 2024 Show
- Phoenix is on the cusp of a new heat record after a 53rd day reaching at least 110 degrees this year
- Powerful earthquake strikes Morocco, causing shaking in much of the country
- Most popular books of the week: See what topped USA TODAY's bestselling books list
- Jimmy Buffett's new music isn't over yet: 3 songs out now, album due in November
- Crashing the party: Daniil Medvedev upsets Carlos Alcaraz to reach US Open final
- American teen Coco Gauff wins US Open women's final for first Grand Slam title
- Apple iOS 18.2: What to know about top features, including Genmoji, AI updates
- Mysterious golden egg found 2 miles deep on ocean floor off Alaska — and scientists still don't know what it is
Ranking
- Toyota to invest $922 million to build a new paint facility at its Kentucky complex
- Emotions will run high for Virginia as the Cavaliers honor slain teammate ahead of 1st home game
- Red Velvet Oreos returning to shelves for a limited time. Here's when to get them.
- All the Behind-the-Scenes Secrets You Should Know While You're Binge-Watching Suits
- Global Warming Set the Stage for Los Angeles Fires
- Families in Gaza have waited years to move into new homes. Political infighting is keeping them out
- A southern Swiss region votes on a plan to fast-track big solar parks on Alpine mountainsides
- Pakistani police detain relatives of the man wanted in the death probe of his daughter in UK
Recommendation
Israel lets Palestinians go back to northern Gaza for first time in over a year as cease
WR Kadarius Toney's 3 drops, 1 catch earns him lowest Pro Football Focus grade since 2018
G20 agreement reflects sharp differences over Ukraine and the rising clout of the Global South
Exclusive: 25 years later, Mark McGwire still gets emotional reliving 1998 Home Run Chase
Apple iOS 18.2: What to know about top features, including Genmoji, AI updates
Tribal nations face less accurate, more limited 2020 census data because of privacy methods
Egypt’s annual inflation hits a new record, reaching 39.7% in August
Gunmen attack vehicles at border crossing into north Mexico, wounding 9, including some Americans