home.social

#ethan-mollick — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #ethan-mollick, aggregated by home.social.

fetched live
  1. ChatGPT hits 200 million active weekly users, but how many will admit using it? - Enlarge (credit: Benj Edwards / Getty Images)

    On Thursday, Ope... - arstechnica.com/?p=2046413 #machinelearning #aiprohibition #ethanmollick #aicritics #aistigma #edzitron #chatgpt #chatgtp #biz#openai #axios #ai

  2. I hesitate to use the term ‘prompt engineering’ because it carries a lot of baggage. It suggests this is a precise skill constituting a form of expertise, lending itself to being framed as the basis for a new occupation for the 21st century. There’s a lot of similarity between the ‘prompt engineering’ discourse and how ‘data scientists’ were talked about in the early 2010s. Conversational agents will now do this precise work for you in an unsettlingly effective way:

    Instead I think we should frame prompting as an expression of cultural capital. Much as the capacity to manipulate symbols in socially valued ways can help you ‘get on’ in organisations, it can help you get on with conversational agents. These systems are fundamentally rewarding articulacy in a way parallel to other arenas where articulacy is rewarded. To be able to explain your intentions, provide a plan of action and share goals enables you to use conversational agents effectively.

    My experience is that the literacy which I’ve developed as a long-term blogger is exceptionally powerful for using conversational agents effectively. I’ve had 20 years of practice of taking vague intuitions or ideas and quickly explicating them in a long form way, which enables me to easily deploy conversational agents in a range of ways which would be much more difficult and/or time consuming without this literacy.

    This helps us unpack what Ethan Mollick somewhat underwhelmingly describes as a ‘natural gift’ on loc 2474 of his book Co-intelligence: Living and Working with AI:

    While, as we discussed in the last chapter, prompt crafting is unlikely to be useful for most people, that doesn’t mean it is entirely useless. It may be that working with AI is itself a form of expertise. It is possible that some people are just really good at it. They can adopt Cyborg practices better than others and have a natural (or learned) gift for working with LLM systems. For them, AI is a huge blessing that changes their place in work and society. Other people may get a small gain from these systems, but these new kings and queens of AI get orders of magnitude improvements. If this scenario is true, they would be the new stars of our AI age and would be sought out by every company and institution, the way other top performers are recruited today.

    Please sociologists don’t neglect this terrain because you find generative AI creepy and hype-ridden! Clearly it is both, but we have a lot to contribute here.

    https://markcarrigan.net/2024/05/17/prompt-engineering-is-an-expression-of-cultural-capital/

    #conversationalAgents #culturalCapital #ethanMollick #generativeAI #prompting

  3. Mysterious “gpt2-chatbot” AI model appears suddenly, confuses experts - Enlarge (credit: Getty Images)

    On Sunday, word began to spread... - arstechnica.com/?p=2020588 #machinelearning #simonwillison #aibenchmarks #chatbotarena #ethanmollick #gpt2-chatbot #samaltman #aivibes #gpt-3.5 #gpt-4.5 #biz#openai #gpt-3 #gpt-4 #gpt-5 #lmsys #ai

  4. The big technology news this past week has been OpenAI, the company behind ChatGPT and DALL-E, announcing the availability of GPTs. Confusing naming aside, this introduces the idea of anyone being able to build ‘agents’ to help them with tasks.
    Ethan Mollick, a professor at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania, is somewhat […]

    https://thoughtshrapnel.com/2023/11/10/co-intelligence-gpts-and-autonomous-agents/

  5. Like most infants, my daughter wanted to speak before she was able to. Unlike most infants, she was extremely frustrated that she couldn’t do so.
    Most people can’t draw as well as they would like. Many people become exasperated when they can’t adequately express their ideas in written form.
    AI can help with all of this and, in my […]

    https://thoughtshrapnel.com/2023/08/24/raising-the-average-level-of-creativity-using-ai/

  6. Democratizing AI vs. democratizing code. A lot of similarities in the role of #citizendevelopers for driving the adoption of new tools.

    "Only innovation driven by workers can actually radically transform work, because only workers can experiment enough on their own tasks to learn how to use AI in transformative ways. And empowering workers is not going to be possible with a top-down solution alone."

    Another great article by #EthanMollick on #GenerativeAI impact: oneusefulthing.org/p/on-holdin