Researchers gave AI an 'inner monologue' and it massively improved its performance

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Researchers gave AI an 'inner monologue' and it massively improved its performance
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Keumars is the technology editor at Live Science. He has written for a variety of publications including ITPro, The Week Digital, ComputerActive, The Independent, The Observer, Metro and TechRadar Pro. He has worked as a technology journalist for more than five years, having previously held the role of features editor with ITPro.

Giving artificial intelligence systems an"inner monologue" makes them considerably better at reasoning, new research shows.

Finally, it learns by discarding rationales that proved incorrect. In effect, the training method gives AI agents the capacity to anticipate future conversations and learn from ongoing ones. The Quiet-STaR-trained version of Mistral 7B scored 47.2% on a reasoning test versus 36.3% before any training. It still flunked a school math test, earning a score of 10.9%. But that was nearly double the starting score of 5.9% in the vanilla version.

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