(2023-05-25, 02:10 PM)Ninshub Wrote: I don't know if this is the right thread for this.
This Montreal newspaper tested ChatGPT for the provincial bar (law) exam. It got 12%!
Article translated here:
https://www-lapresse-ca.translate.goog/a..._tr_pto=sc
It appears the ignorance and stupidity demonstrated by ChatGPT on this occasion is easily explainable, as there being grossly insufficient human writings on the subject on the Internet for the AI large language model to process. The AI just needed much more Internet-derived human-written information on Canadian law, than the relatively small amount available. Whereas, the Internet has a huge amount of information on US law, so as expected the AI turns out to excel at the American Bar exam.
This goes even more to show that such AI systems can be nothing more than complex zero consciousness mechanisms, not sentient or aware.
From the article:
Quote:"...similar experiments have been carried out in the United States. There, ChatGPT had shone in the American Bar exam, earning a mark that would have placed him in the top 10% of students. OpenAI also claims that its robot ranked in the top 10% of scores in several legal tests. How to explain this gap?
Quote:"....the major problem comes from the fact that the robot is much more fed by American law than by Quebec law. “He has peripheral knowledge of Canadian law,” says Mr. Anctil. It's like asking an American lawyer to practice the Civil Code of Quebec. »
“He has access to much, much more American material,” adds Laurent Charlin, associate professor at the École des Hautes Etudes Commerciales (HEC) of the University of Montreal and member of the Chair in Artificial Intelligence of Canada."
Quote:"(Also), these tests are carried out using an extremely precise protocol, which is not the case with the La Presse experiment , which is more "artisanal", notes Dave Anctil, professor of philosophy at Collège Jean -de-Brébeuf and researcher affiliated with the International Observatory of the Societal Impacts of Artificial and Digital Intelligence at Laval University. Under optimal conditions, the robot might have increased its rating. “You have to be careful with this type of artisanal testing."