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Scientists Develop New Algorithm to Spot AI 'Hallucinations'

TIME - Tech

An enduring problem with today's generative artificial intelligence (AI) tools, like ChatGPT, is that they often confidently assert false information. Computer scientists call this behavior "hallucination," and it's a key barrier to AI's usefulness. Hallucinations have led to some embarrassing public slip-ups. In February, AirCanada was forced by a tribunal to honor a discount that its customer-support chatbot had mistakenly offered to a passenger. In May, Google was forced to make changes to its new "AI overviews" search feature, after the bot told some users that it was safe to eat rocks. And last June, two lawyers were fined 5,000 by a U.S. judge after one of them admitted he had used ChatGPT to help write a court filing.


Scientists develop new algorithm that may provide insights into battery corrosion

#artificialintelligence

Argonne researchers have created an automatic technique that can fill in gaps in X-ray data. Putting together a jigsaw puzzle is a great activity for a rainy Sunday afternoon. But the somewhat more difficult process of quickly assembling 3D scientific jigsaw puzzles--atomic structures of different materials--has recently gotten a lot easier, thanks to new research that pairs high-powered X-ray beams with advanced computing methodologies. Researchers at the U.S. Department of Energy's (DOE) Argonne National Laboratory have developed a new technique that accelerates the solving of material structures from patterns uncovered in X-ray experiments. The technique allows researchers to study certain properties, such as corrosion or battery charging and discharging, in real time.