-
'One Battle After Another' location manager explains THAT car chase
-
Why have 1,000 ships at times lost their GPS in the Mideast?
-
Djokovic battles back to win Indian Wells opener
-
Thompson strike seals US victory in SheBelieves Cup
-
Berger's lead narrows at rain-hit Arnold Palmer
-
Netanyahu vows to press Iran war as Trump honors slain US troops
-
Messi bags 899th goal as Miami down DC United
-
Turkey warns over 'dangerous' bid to stir civil war in Iran
-
Yamal bends Barca past Bilbao, Atletico edge Real Sociedad
-
Marseille take revenge on Toulouse and rise to third in Ligue 1
-
New attacks in Gulf as Iran vows for more
-
Yamal class secures Barca narrow win at Athletic Bilbao
-
Man City hand Newcastle brutal FA Cup lesson as Chelsea survive scare
-
Rybakina holds off Baptiste in testing Indian Wells opener
-
Como boost Champions League bid, Juve back to winning ways
-
As Iran conflict spills over, Iraq's Kurds say 'this war is not mine'
-
Protests across globe mark one week of Iran war
-
US starts using UK bases for 'defensive' Iran operations
-
Chelsea deny 10-man Wrexham Hollywood finish in FA Cup thriller
-
Netanyahu vows to carry on war, 'eradicate Iranian regime'
-
Gonzalez brace helps Atletico beat Real Sociedad
-
Dortmund beat 10-man Cologne to tighten grip on top-four spot
-
'We've given ourselves an opportunity', says Tuipulotu after win over France
-
Skiing 'filled the void' for Paralympian Soens after life-changing fall
-
Lamaro praises Italy's history-making 'wall in defence'
-
Italy make history in Six Nations beating England for first time
-
Tehran residents keep up semblance of normality amid destruction
-
Griezmann 'will continue' with Atletico despite MLS option: sporting director
-
Protesters come out for Iran, against war in spots across the globe
-
Scotland throw open Six Nations title race with stunning win over France
-
Leverkusen held at Freiburg before Arsenal clash
-
Trump offers LatAm leaders US missile strikes to hit drug cartels
-
Key to Scotland win over France was fast start, says Steyn
-
Iran fires at Gulf neighbours as Trump threatens more strikes
-
Scotland stun France 50-40 to take Six Nations to wire
-
Pogacar begins season with dominant Strade Bianche win
-
Failed Israeli commando operation to find airman remains kills 41 in Lebanon
-
Bronze and Stanway on target for England in World Cup qualifying
-
'No pressure, no fun', says India's Suryakumar ahead of World Cup final
-
Russian strikes kill 12 across Ukraine
-
Women rule the roost atop the Gdansk shipyard cranes
-
'Fun day' for Olympic champion Braathen in giant slalom win
-
Bayern's Neuer out of Atalanta tie with calf tear
-
Arsenal survive FA Cup scare to keep quadruple dream alive
-
Ohtani homers again as Japan edge South Korea at World Baseball Classic
-
Japan hammer India 11-0 in Women's Asian Cup mismatch
-
Trump threatens to escalate bombing as Iran vows no surrender
-
Russian strikes kill 11 across Ukraine
-
Nepal's rapper politician who took on the old guard and won
-
Pirovano doubles up with second Val di Fassa downhill win
OpenAI releases reasoning AI with eye on safety, accuracy
ChatGPT creator OpenAI on Thursday released a new series of artificial intelligence models designed to spend more time thinking -- in hopes that generative AI chatbots provide more accurate and beneficial responses.
The new models, known as OpenAI o1-Preview, are designed to tackle complex tasks and solve more challenging problems in science, coding and mathematics -- something that earlier models have been criticized for failing to provide consistently.
Unlike their predecessors, these models have been trained to refine their thinking processes, try different methods and recognize mistakes before they deploy a final answer.
The new release comes as OpenAI is raising funds that could see it valued around $150 billion, which would make it one of the world's most valuable private companies, according to US media.
Investors include Microsoft and Nvidia, and could also include a $7 billion investment from MGX, a United Arab Emirates-backed investment fund, The Information reported.
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman hailed the models as "a new paradigm: AI that can do general-purpose complex reasoning."
However, he cautioned that the technology "is still flawed, still limited, and it still seems more impressive on first use than it does after you spend more time with it."
OpenAI's push to improve "thinking" in its model is a response to the persistent problem of "hallucinations" in AI chatbots.
This refers to their tendency to generate persuasive but incorrect content that has somewhat cooled the excitement over ChatGPT-style AI features among business customers
"We have noticed that this model hallucinates less," OpenAI researcher Jerry Tworek told The Verge.
But "we can't say we solved hallucinations," he added.
The Microsoft-backed company said that in tests, the models performed comparably to PhD students on difficult tasks in physics, chemistry and biology.
They also excelled in mathematics and coding, achieving an 83 percent success rate on a qualifying exam for the International Mathematics Olympiad, compared to 13 percent for GPT-4o, its most advanced general use model.
OpenAI said that the new reasoning capabilities could be used for healthcare researchers to annotate cell sequencing data, physicists to generate complex formulas, or computer developers to build and execute multistep designs.
The company also said that the models survived rigorous jailbreaking tests and could better withstand attempts to circumvent its guardrails.
OpenAI said its strengthened safety measures also included recent agreements with the US and UK AI Safety Institutes, which were granted early access to the models for evaluation and testing.
X.Karnes--AMWN