GenAI's Mixed Blessings
Jerry Michalski
Visionary Futurist for 30+ Years | Expert on Trust & Mistrust | Keynote Speaker | Curator of The World’s Largest Mind Map
One of the harbingers of Generative AI's recent explosion on the world stage was the 2016 Go match between Lee Sedol, the world's top-ranked Go player, and AlphaGo, a neural network trained on historic Go games (Go is an ancient board game more complicated than chess). The New York Times just posted this thoughtful interview with him (gift link).
One bittersweet note is about AI's effects on creativity and personality:
Mr. Lee had a hard time accepting the defeat. What he regarded as an art form, an extension of a player’s own personality and style, was now cast aside for an algorithm’s ruthless efficiency. “I could no longer enjoy the game,” he said. “So I retired.”
In recent conversations, several friends have rued the coming tsunami of written materials with no distinct human author: no individual whose background, beliefs, passions and skills inhabit and shape any specific AI-written piece.
Ironically, GenAI is so good because it is a stew of the collected writings of millions of such passionate individuals, whose works were fed as training material. It is in their pasteurization and homogenization that the individual sparks seem to be lost.
Notably, AlphaGo's creators at DeepMind followed up by creating a new Go-playing system that was not trained on historic human games. Instead, AlphaGo Zero was given the rules of Go, then set to play itself. In three days of training itself, this new version was better than the best human players, as well as the original AlphaGo.
The version that wasn't fed the human-created data, rife with the game's norms, biases and tropes, was able to discover a variety of moves that were "unorthodox" to experienced Go players. In some way, AGZ's naiveté was the source of its creativity.
This led to the following chart, which stopped me cold the first time I saw it:
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That stretch under the top of the curve is my first strong evidence of AI's creativity.
Note the many constraints being shattered here: Sedol's belief he would beat AlphaGo, AlphaGo Zero's blowing past AlphaGo Lee (the original version), our expectations that GenAI can't be creative. There are more.
These insights on creativity shine a different light to another quote of Sedol's in the NYT piece:
What he worries about is that A.I. may change what humans value. “People used to be in awe of creativity, originality and innovation,” he said. “But since A.I. came, a lot of that has disappeared.”
Disappeared? I have a hunch we'll be perceiving creativity, originality and innovation quite differently in the next couple decades. And I'm not sure it will spell the downfall of civilization.
#GenAI, #AlphaGo, #creativity, #innovation, #thehumantouch, #rethinkconstraints
Don't forget, Jerry, that AlphaGo used the machine learned stuff within a Monte Carlo Rollout / Monte Carlo tree search framework. The machine-learned parts did not invent Monte Carlo Rollout. The full story—as always—is more complicated than what the hype machines present.
Global Change Futurist ?? | Transformational Speaker ?? | Career Portfolio Guide ?? | Author of FLUX: 8 Superpowers for Thriving in Constant Change ?? | Powered by Joy & Gratitude ??♀?
4 个月Jerry Michalski More of this, please! Your ability to distill history and simplify complex information (about AI and much more) is not only far better than 99.99% of humans, but also you bring the context and nuance that AI lacks *and* it's fun to read! I feel like I'm on a scavenger hunt with you and we actually find what we're looking for. :)
Strategy and Creative Production | ? Apple Alum | Worked with Starbucks, NTT, AWS, Adobe, Google | Multiple startups in tech, media, sustainability, wellness.
4 个月Jerry Michalski I hope you will continue to share your thoughts in this area. I love how you left us with the opened ended question: “… have a hunch we'll be perceiving creativity, originality and innovation quite differently in the next couple decades. And I'm not sure it will spell the downfall of civilization. “