The Biggest Trends in Artificial Intelligence, According to Stanford

Stanford's 2023 State of AI report suggests we're still a bit wary of artificial intelligence, but it's being embraced by business (and China)

This picture taken on January 23, 2023 in Toulouse, southwestern France, shows screens displaying the logos of OpenAI and ChatGPT. - ChatGPT is a conversational artificial intelligence software application developed by OpenAI

You'll be seeing a lot more of ChatGPT

By Kirk Miller

If you break down artificial intelligence by numbers and charts, it’s not that scary. This week, the Stanford Institute for Human-Centered Artificial Intelligence (HAI) released its 2023 AI Index, which offers a “snapshot of what happened this past year in AI R&D, education, policy, hiring and more” from a set of academic, private and non-profit organizations.

Some of the results aren’t surprising: the current language models are surpassing the current set of technical performance benchmarks, the bigger models emit large carbon emissions, China is all in on industrial robots, etc. However, a few surprising numbers appeared.

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The big takeaways:

The best news is that AI has shown some decidedly positive effects in the field of health and science. “AI models are starting to rapidly accelerate scientific progress and in 2022 were used to aid hydrogen fusion, improve the efficiency of matrix manipulation, and generate new antibodies,” as the paper notes.

The most interesting statistic, however, is a possible domestic concern and proof that our worries about AI persist. Americans simply aren’t trusting artificial intelligence (and least not yet) — only 35% of those sampled in this country agreed that “products and services using AI had more benefits than drawbacks.” The support was more than twice as much in China, Saudi Arabia and India.

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