Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Oliver Batchelor's avatar

Curious, but interesting.

The first behaviour seems explainable, given that they process the text sequentially. If you forced a human to read the two of them sequentially without referring back to the first, I suspect you'd get a bias one way or the other! I don't know that recent LLMS cannot skip around the text, but at least in the vanilla form, they don't - which would mean less accuracy in assessing the first piece of text! (More recent LLMs try to do self-criticism and various other tricks)

The second one seems particularly characteristic of trying to get feedback from an LLM. In my experience, they either agree with everything you say, or even when you take the counter-argument, they still agree. Alternatively, they steadfastly stick to some position even when presented with obvious contradictions. They're the ultimate yes-man.

Expand full comment
Jan's avatar
Jan 13Edited

It all feels rather too close to Forster's The Machine Stops. It feels as if someone has invented something, AI, and now everyone is scurrying around trying to find a use for it. Possibly the best way to assess a child's or student's work is to read it and assess it . If you're the teacher you presumably set the work and know the kids.

Expand full comment
5 more comments...

No posts