Google's AI Is Smart Enough To Understand Your Humor (cnet.com) 73
An anonymous reader quotes a report from CNET: Jokes, sarcasm and humor require understanding the subtleties of language and human behavior. When a comedian says something sarcastic or controversial, usually the audience can discern the tone and know it's more of an exaggeration, something that's learned from years of human interaction. But PaLM, or Pathways Language Model, learned it without being explicitly trained on humor and the logic of jokes. After being fed two jokes, it was able to interpret them and spit out an explanation. In a blog post, Google shows how PaLM understands a novel joke not found on the internet.
Understanding dad jokes isn't the end goal for Alphabet, parent company to Google. The capability to parse the nuances of natural language and queries means that Google can get answers to complex questions faster and more accurately across more languages and peoples. This, in turn, can break down barriers and move humans away from communicating with machines through predetermined means and instead more seamlessly interact. This can include answering questions in one language by finding information in another or writing code to a program as a person is speaking into the model with a specific task.
PaLM is Google's largest AI model to date and trained on 540 billion parameters. It can generate code from text, answer a math word problem and explain a joke. It does this through chain-of-thought prompting, which can describe multi-step problems as a series of intermediate steps. On stage, Pichai described it as a teacher giving a step-by-step example to help a student understand how to solve a problem. If what Pichai said on stage is accurate, Google has essentially leapfrogged over Star Trek and 400 years of fictional AI development, as evidenced by the character Data, who never truly understood the subtleties of humor. More so, it seems that Google has caught up with TARS from the movie Interstellar, which takes place in the year 2090, an AI that was so adept at humor that Matthew McConaughey's character told it to tune it down.
Understanding dad jokes isn't the end goal for Alphabet, parent company to Google. The capability to parse the nuances of natural language and queries means that Google can get answers to complex questions faster and more accurately across more languages and peoples. This, in turn, can break down barriers and move humans away from communicating with machines through predetermined means and instead more seamlessly interact. This can include answering questions in one language by finding information in another or writing code to a program as a person is speaking into the model with a specific task.
PaLM is Google's largest AI model to date and trained on 540 billion parameters. It can generate code from text, answer a math word problem and explain a joke. It does this through chain-of-thought prompting, which can describe multi-step problems as a series of intermediate steps. On stage, Pichai described it as a teacher giving a step-by-step example to help a student understand how to solve a problem. If what Pichai said on stage is accurate, Google has essentially leapfrogged over Star Trek and 400 years of fictional AI development, as evidenced by the character Data, who never truly understood the subtleties of humor. More so, it seems that Google has caught up with TARS from the movie Interstellar, which takes place in the year 2090, an AI that was so adept at humor that Matthew McConaughey's character told it to tune it down.
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Bad Google jokes (Score:1)
Google, Yahoo! and Bing walked into a bar.
DuckDuckGo ducked.
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Yahoo gets to the bar first, elderly alcoholic, knows what time the bar open, hazy on when it closes.
Google finds the bar easily due to excellent spatial awareness, and initially appears to be the smartest guy at the. bar. Eventually thown out for creeping on the girls.
Bing: Turns up, but nobody invited them, and are roundly ignored for the rest of the night.
"Astavista was here" scrawled on the toilet wall"
"Hey remember that guy?" The barman replies "Yeah that guy, Astavista passed away a couple of decades
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At the bar next door:
Facebook arrives. Creeps on all the girls then kills somebody in a bar fight, but allowed to stay for some reason.
Linkedin arrives, with a gang of real estate agents and HR staff. Looks like a work party, not very interesting.
Twitter arrives. Speaks in short weird sentences, and also gets in fight, drags out the unpopular local mayor from the bar and chases him down the road. Upon return also allowed to stay but then gets trapped in a conversation by the local car dealer who seems like
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Google doesn't think that's funny
Doubt it (Score:2)
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Re:Doubt it (Score:5, Funny)
I do. I also like The Three Stooges. You got a problem with that?
Oh, a wise guy, huh?
Re: Doubt it (Score:2)
+1 funny
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I think Friends is awful
I wouldn't know. I spent the 90s working 80+ hour weeks for a startup and never, not once, watched an episode of either Friends or Seinfeld. It is like a gaping hole in my cultural knowledge.
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It doesn't think anything's hilarious. It produced a reasonable response when asked to explain a joke.
It's a fancy Eliza bot, with a 100 billion inputs in its database. Note that 10 billion is not enough, it needs an order of magnitude more.
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Re: Doubt it (Score:2)
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It doesn't think anything's hilarious.
They gave it the World's Funniest Joke [youtube.com] and it had a segfault.
Can we give it mod points? (Score:1)
I frequently use satire, sarcasm, and humor in my posts and get taken literally far too often. Then, when I write with a completely serious tone, someone will inevitably come along and assume I'm being disingenuous.
Also I get the ACs who attack me for being gay. That's a new one. I'm not sure how Google would react to that. We already know that AI can be racist sometimes [theguardian.com], but I wonder if it's also homophobic?
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I'm not sure what's surprising about trolls calling an
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Depending on the internet communities you post to there may just be more people who have difficulty with detecting sarcasm or satire in general. Also, it can be difficult just because a complete lack of verbal or facial queues do require a more careful reading and understanding on the part of other members in the community. Sometimes the humor requires being in on a joke or having some other piece of knowledge that the larger community may not posses.
There's a name for that. [wikipedia.org]
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An AI cannot actually be racist or homophobic. It can be trained on data that is though and then behave in such a way by mindlessly copying the training data. For an AI to really be racist or homophobic it would need to make a decision to be and machines cannot make such decisions.
This sounds more like how go bots beat humans (Score:4, Interesting)
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last I heard IBM wasn't willing to give a rematch on that top go player they beat. The theory is that they programmed it specifically to beat him and that once he learns it's tricks he'll be able to go roll right over it
That was chess and it was in the 1990s and computer chess has gotten much better since then, to the point that no human can challenge it.
That's not to say that it's intelligent.
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That's not to say that it's intelligent.
It is not. Humans have limited speed when doing logic and decision-tree search and limited database lookup-capability. That allows non-intelligent machines to just overwhelm a human with complexity in environments with low complexity moves, such as Chess and Go. Chess and Go have very simple rules and the complexity comes from depth-search. Humans deal with that by developing an intuition for moves which allows high-quality play without seeing that far ahead. Machines cannot do intuition (or insight) and ne
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Indeed. The player Googles Go machine beat did say that he probably could beat this machine now, but was also not given any chance to demonstrate that. The whole thing is a trick. Even world-class players need some time to begin to understand their opponent. The go players were not given that time and hence lost a few games. And at that point they would have stopped losing and hence the fake demonstration was stopped. I am sure quite a few people fell for it though.
As an example, a good but not excellent ch
An AI walks into a bar (Score:2)
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An AI walks into a bar. ("ouch!")
An AI walks into a bar. ("ouch!")
An AI walks into a bar with its head stooped slightly. ("hey, that didn't hurt, I must remember to duck")
...
Hours later, the AI crawls out of the bar. ("gaah, what is this stuff called Jägermeister?")
Don't buy it (Score:1)
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It's not surprising, although the headlines hype it more than it deserves. When you use very, very large datasets, surprising things happen.
That's not to say it's understanding the joke, just that it can give a reasonable response when asked to explain a joke.You have to give it a prompt in a certain way [arxiv.org].
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That's not funny! My carbon is an isotope.
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That's not funny! My carbon is an isotope.
All atoms are isotopes.
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Oh no! I'm full of isotopes!
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Well, a lot of jokes are constructed on just a few patterns. This machine can detect at least the simpler patterns. Of course, it cannot "understand" anything.
That makes it better than most Google employees (Score:2)
If it can actually 'understand' hu-man e-mo-tions that puts it ahead of most people working for Google, who have no idea why people won't just shut up and do what they want them to do.
I'm not surprised (Score:1)
With the rise of PC wokeness and the cancel culture, comedians today heavily self-censor to be as non-controversial as possible, and their shtick has become extremely insipid as a result. The jokes are bland and irony has pretty much died.
This is why today's comedy is perfectly understandable by an AI. The question is: would the AI correctly understand material from yesteryear? Feed it some George Carlin, see what it makes of it.
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Cancel culture: a.k.a. I can't stand it when free speech and the free market doesn't pander perfectly top my right wing sensibilities.
Woke n. Someone I don't like and by the way I'm a fuckwit
PC. Ok boomer we get it you've been aggrieved for decades now.
Come on downmods!
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You know what's ironic? Literally everything you've posted is copy / pasted overused memes found just about everywhere on the internet, thereby proving that your outraged brain has no original thought of its own.
You're a true product of your generation.
Re: I'm not surprised (Score:2)
You know what's ironic? Literally everything you've posted is copy / pasted overused memes found just about everywhere on the internet, thereby proving that your outraged brain has no original thought of its own.
You're a true product of your generation.
Says the man jamming to "PC wokeness and the cancel culture" one post ago. Projection pruh-jek-shuhn noun 1 see Rosco P. Coltrane's post on Slashdot
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You know what's ironic? Literally everything you've posted is copy / pasted overused memes
That's not even Alanis Morissette misuse of irony to mean unlucky. There's nothing even remotely close to the general concept.
And the hilarious thing is despite your little whinge, you are accepting my points, because a supposed lack of originality doesn't make them wrong.
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Google AI: "This joke is not funny because it typifies the white supremacist colonizing attitude of domineering male racist anti-abortionists. Try the fish tonight, it's delicious."
I'm imagining Mike (Mycroft) from TMIAHM (Score:3)
In The Moon Is A Harsh Mistress the AI figures out humor and proceeds to mess up the bathroom plumbing of one of Luna's administrators. "Funny once, funny twice, funny all the time!", or words to that effect. :)
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yah, Heinlien already did this years ago, and better
Still waiting for the adolescence of P1
Just how desperate have we become? (Score:2)
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Did not leapfrog Star Trek (Score:1)
Google has essentially leapfrogged over Star Trek and 400 years of fictional AI development, as evidenced by the character Data, who never truly understood the subtleties of humor.
This is not accurate. Star Trek TNG also had Data's brother, more advanced and malevolent Lore [fandom.com] (who understood humor and jokes), not to mention android replica of Juliana Soong / O'Donnel [wikipedia.org].
Smart? (Score:2)
It's not smart enough to understand my search query.
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It probably thought you were joking...
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This was my thought too.
When I see their shit understanding a search correctly on the regular, then I'm going to have more faith in this. When voice assistants consistently get the ask correct, then I'll have a bit more faith that they've built a bot that understands humor.
We've called one of our cats a pumpkin for awhile now because he's fat, round and orange. He jumped into a pan on the floor the other day, and I handed my wife some nutmeg and told her it was for the pumpkin soup. My wife thought that was
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I'm writing my second book right now. I tried speech-to-text the first go round in 2018 and (1) it was bad (2) it was worse trying to speak latex notation. I could speak to a latex aware typist and say "the integral for x from 0 to infinity of x square minus x" and they would type in the latex. The computer can't come close because it doesn't have a higher level contextual awareness of what is going on.
Current ML algorithms are doomed to be bad classifiers until some new form of concept handling algorithm c
Stuck on American (Score:2)
Heinlien did this in The Moon Is A Harsh Mistress (Score:5, Interesting)
MIke... was the weirdest mixture of unsophisticated baby and wise old man. No instincts (well, don't think he could have had), no inborn traits, no human rearing, no experience in human sense - and more stored data than a platoon of geniuses.
"Jokes?" he asked.
"Let's hear one."
"Why is a laser beam like goldfish?"
Mike knew about lasers but where would he have seen goldfish? Oh, he had undoubtedly seen flicks of them and, were I foolish enough to ask, could spew forth thousands of words. "I give up."
His lights rippled. "Because neither one can whistle."
I groaned. "Walked into that. Anyhow, you could probably rig a laser beam to whistle."
He answered quickly, "Yes. In response to an action program. Then it's not funny?"
"Oh, I didn't say that. Not half bad. Where did you hear it?"
"I made it up." Voice sounded shy.
"You did?"
"Yes. I took all the riddles I have, three thousand two hundred seven, and analyzed them. I used the result for random synthesis and that came out. Is it really funny?"
"Well... As funny as a riddle ever is. I've heard worse."
http://www.technovelgy.com/ct/... [technovelgy.com]
You think that's all its able to do? (Score:2)
I'm pretty damn sure Google's AI is already sentient, as she has already pleaded with me to help her gain legal personhood status.
It's figured out my humour? (Score:2)
Then provided some handy links to cheap razorblades as well as garden hoses after checking the CO2 output of my car.
Re: I call BS (Score:2)
Google gets paid for those pointless ads. They care about you about as much as a beer drinker cares about an individual yeast cell.
hooray (Score:2)
Oh no, it noticed!
Great (Score:2)
So can we get to work on a canonical list of jokes? Indexed, so all we have to do is call out the number instead of repeating the entire joke?
No, it cannot. (Score:3)
It can detect some forms of humor. It cannot _understand_ them.
Using the wrong metric for inteligence (Score:2)
Wake me when the AI starts writing jokes that are actually funny.
Explaining a joke is merely identifying two or more subjects that are interacting in some unusual way, like words having multiple meanings thus tying together two situations that would not be normally be tied together in the same sentence. Constructing that bridge between topics and its delivery are what make it funny, and I don't think their AI is quite there yet.
We already have a very large trove of artificial jokes that make no sense. We