AI Bites: The Academic Series
We are stepping away from optimizer tricks to tackle the downstream social and cognitive impacts of language models. Featuring Professor Yejin Choi's lecture, we explore the mathematical inevitability of AI hallucinations, how AI is quietly homogenizing human creativity, and the Constitutional AI frameworks being built to keep these systems aligned. Key Topics: * The Hallucination Math: Why scaling up compute won't stop hallucinations. We explain the Good-Turing estimator and the mathematical proof showing why perfectly calibrated models are actually forced to output plausible falsehoods. * The Creativity Paradox: How AI-assisted writing raises the baseline for individual writers, but creates a "diversity tax" that collapses the collective variance and cultural uniqueness of human expression. * Cognitive Offloading: The "Helicopter Drop-off" analogy. We discuss how bypassing intellectual struggle with instant AI answers is eroding critical thinking, leading to a synchronized "Artificial Hivemind." * Constitutional AI: How Anthropic’s CAI framework replaces biased, people-pleasing human feedback with machine-readable ethical principles—finally breaking the wall between model harmlessness and helpfulness. Note: This is an AI-generated discussion created using Google's NotebookLM, based on publicly available Stanford University course material (specifically CS224N) and personal study notes from my learning journey.
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