Some key takeaways of Artificial Inteligence index report 2024

Some key takeaways of Artificial Inteligence index report 2024

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Mind map and summary of Stanford AI index report 2024

1. #AI beats humans on some tasks, but not on all:

AI has surpassed human performance on several benchmarks, including some in image classification, visual reasoning, and English understanding. Yet it trails behind on more complex tasks like competition-level mathematics, visual commonsense reasoning and planning.

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AI technical performance vs Human Performance 2012 - 2023

2. Industry continues to dominate frontier #AI research:

In 2023, industry produced 51 notable machine learning models, while academia contributed only 15. There were also 21 notable models resulting from industry-academia collaborations in 2023, a new high.

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No of ML models by sector 2003 - 2023

3. Frontier models get way more expensive:

According to AI Index estimates, the training costs of state-of-the-art AI models have reached unprecedented levels. For example, OpenAI’s GPT-4 used an estimated $78 million worth of compute to train, while Google’s Gemini Ultra cost $191 million for compute.

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Estimated training cost of AI models

4. The United States leads China, the EU, and the U.K. as the leading source of top AI models:

In 2023, 61 notable AI models originated from U.S.-based institutions, far outpacing the European Union’s 21 and China’s 15.

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Number of notable ML models by country

5. Robust and standardized evaluations for LLM responsibility are seriously lacking:

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Responsible AI dimensions, definitions and examples

New research from the AI Index reveals a significant lack of standardization in responsible AI reporting. Leading developers, including OpenAI, Google, and Anthropic, primarily test their models against different responsible AI benchmarks. This practice complicates efforts to systematically compare the risks and limitations of top AI models.

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Harmful responses across different risk categories by foundation model

6. Generative AI investment skyrockets:

Despite a decline in overall AI private investment last year, funding for generative AI surged, nearly octupling from 2022 to reach $25.2 billion. Major players in the generative AI space, including OpenAI, Anthropic, Hugging Face, and Inflection, reported substantial fundraising rounds.

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Private investment in Generative AI 2019 - 2023

7. The data is in: AI makes workers more productive and leads to higher quality work:

In 2023, several studies assessed AI’s impact on labor, suggesting that AI enables workers to complete tasks more quickly and to improve the quality of their output. These studies also demonstrated AI’s potential to bridge the skill gap between low- and high-skilled workers. Still, other studies caution that using AI without proper oversight can lead to diminished performance.

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Relative AI skill penetration rate 2015 - 2023

8. Scientific progress accelerates even further, thanks to AI:

In 2022, AI began to advance scientific discovery. 2023, however, saw the launch of even more significant science-related AI applications from AlphaDev, which makes algorithmic sorting more efficient,

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AlphaDev vs Human benchmarks when optimizing for a algorithm length

to GNoME, which facilitates the process of materials discovery.

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GNoME vs Material Project

9. The number of AI regulations in the United States sharply increases:

The number of AI- related regulations in the U.S. has risen significantly in the past year and over the last five years.

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No of AI-related bills in the US 2016 - 2023

In 2023, there were 25 AI-related regulations, up from just one in 2016. Last year alone, the total number of AI-related regulations grew by 56.3%.

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No of AI-related bills passed in selected US states 2023

10. People across the globe are more cognizant of AI’s potential impact and more nervous:

A survey from Ipsos shows that, over the last year, the proportion of those who think AI will dramatically affect their lives in the next three to five years has increased from 60% to 66%.

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Global opinions on products and services using AI 2022 vs 2023

Moreover, 52% express nervousness toward AI products and services, marking a 13 percentage point rise from 2022. In America, Pew data suggests that 52% of Americans report feeling more concerned than excited about AI, rising from 37% in 2022.

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Americans' opinions of whether AI helps or hurts in specific settings 2023


Ref:

Stanford Institute for Human-Centered Artificial Intelligence (HAI) #AI index report 2024


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