Comment by stared

7 days ago

I dislike the term AGI, as intelligence (of any type) always involves tradeoffs. Being exceptional at solving 2D grid-based pattern tasks is just one skill. Humans have a strong visual bias, while some hypothetical superintelligent slime molds might value entirely different problems. I know smart people (PhDs in STEM fields at major universities) who struggle with geometric puzzles, yet excel at linguistic or algebraic ones.

Getting a perfect ARC-AGI-n score isn't a smoking gun indicator of general intelligence. Rather, it simply means we're now able to solve a class of problems previously beyond AI capabilities (which is exciting in itself!).

I view ARC-AGI primarily as a benchmark (similar in spirit to Raven's matrices) that makes memorization substantially harder. Compare this with vocabulary-focused IQ tests, where cognitive skills certainly matter, but results depend heavily on exposure to a particular language.

Call me crazy but we should be optimizing for human visual intelligence rather than slime mold symbolic space

  • It's obvious why having human visual intelligence in a machine is desirable.

    But if slime mold symbolic space is better suited for something like understanding of biology or abstract math, that's a good damn reason to go for the slime mold route too.