![]() ![]() According to Victor Tseng, MD, of Ansible Health in Mountain View, California, and colleagues, the results showed ‘new and surprising evidence’ that this AI tool was up to the challenge. Quoting directly from the article: “The first paper, published on Medrxiv ( bit.ly/3Xuk27p) in December 2022, investigated ChatGPT’s performance on the USMLE without any special training or reinforcement prior to the exams. A US-based friend sent over a news clipping from MedPage Today ( bit.ly/3XsrkbG) that seems to indicate that ChatGPT can pass the exam that will allow it to become a doctor. There is news that ChatGPT has the ability to pass the US medical licensing examination. Now, I may stand corrected in my view of generative models. As expected, this can power up industry applications such as chatbots, widely used in customer service applications, and could serve as a different type of engine to provide contextual searches that deliver more than what traditional web searches done by Google, Duck Duck Go or Microsoft’s own Bing can. Early in December, the San Francisco-based company released a demo of a model called ChatGPT, a spin-off of GPT-3 that is geared toward answering questions via back-and-forth dialogue. However, it seems as if OpenAI isn’t done tinkering with their old models yet. Most industry watchers expected generative AI to move on to newer models, such as a potential GPT-4 in 2023. GPT-3 analysed thousands of digital books, and nearly a trillion words posted to blogs, social media and the rest of the internet. OpenAI, heavily backed by Microsoft, has GPT-3, which is mainly for documents. ![]()
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