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DeepMind’s New ChatBot Is Good But Still Needs Improvements

Despite being designed for good, Sparrow was found to break its own rules 8% of the time.
Training conversational AI is complicated. Even after years of evolution, they are nowhere near the maturity level to hold human-like conversations. We all remember Google’s “breakthrough conversation technology” LaMDA and the semi-convincing debate that swirled around a few months ago. Evidently, bridging the communication gap between humans and computers is easier said than done. In an attempt to fill the gap, DeepMind recently released its new AI chatbot ‘Sparrow’, a “useful dialogue agent that reduces the risk of unsafe and inappropriate answers”. As per the subsidiary of Google’s parent company Alphabet, the chatbot is designed to “talk, answer questions and look up evidence using Google when it’s helpful to inform its responses”. The Human Factor AI
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Picture of Tasmia Ansari
Tasmia Ansari
Tasmia is a tech journalist at AIM, looking to bring a fresh perspective to emerging technologies and trends in data science, analytics, and artificial intelligence.
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