Prepared by: Khansaa Al-Zubair
The generative artificial intelligence program, ChatGPT, has become widely known and has shown great efficiency in performing many tasks, to the point that it has begun to cause concern among many fields of work, and opinions have emerged predicting that it will eliminate many jobs in the coming years.
The best person to give his opinion on this matter is Sam Altman, CEO of OpenAI, the developer of ChatGPT, who said in a podcast with Bill Gates that anyone can ask this technology to answer a question or Perform a specific task, but it is particularly useful for workers in three specific industries. These areas are:
1 – Programming
Altman believes that GPT Chat technology can help programmers finish their work three times faster than usual, and that this system can help in some tasks such as reviewing written code to detect errors, writing a “lab”, answering programmers’ questions, and even And even generate entirely new code on their own.
The important word here is “help.” The “GPT4 Chat” program, which OpenAI launched last year, provides the wrong answer to programming questions in about half of the cases, according to a 2023 study by researchers at Stanford University and the University of California, Berkeley.
Programmers who use the software to help them with their work must be careful and double-check everything the chatbot says, as the process may be faster than performing these tasks manually.
Altman said the goal is not only to help programmers complete more work in less time, but also that such a shift in productivity helps give people more free time to think outside the box. He believes that at this high level of “experimentation” they are able to think about completely different things.
2- Education
Currently, artificial intelligence systems can help teachers design a curriculum or lesson plans tailored to specific students, and save teachers’ time by performing various administrative tasks on their behalf, such as tracking attendance or sending automatic assignment reminders.
It may also be useful in learning new languages, as educational technology companies, such as Duolingo, have reportedly begun to significantly reduce the number of employees after relying more on artificial intelligence. Bill Gates praised ChatGBT’s ability to run private tutoring programs, hoping to expand access to dedicated tutors for students in remote and underserved communities. Last year, he predicted that people would be “amazed” by how much artificial intelligence teachers would soon be able to help improve students’ reading and writing skills.
Gates said, in a keynote speech during a summit in San Diego last April, that artificial intelligence will reach such an ability that it will become as good a teacher as humans.
Some teachers fear that some tools, such as the “GPT Chat” program, could make it easier for students to cheat on school assignments, but research has not shown any increase in cheating rates so far, but the errors that may occur mean that parents and teachers must remind students. Not relying entirely on artificial intelligence.
3 – Health care
This software has already passed the US medical licensing exam, although experts warn that the system’s tendency to make errors makes it unlikely that most patients will trust it in the foreseeable future.
However, artificial intelligence tools can benefit doctors by acting as a digital assistant to help with time-consuming administrative tasks, such as insurance paperwork, for example, American Medical Association President Jesse Ehrenfeld said last year.
Such tools can analyze research and summarize patients’ medical histories, the American Medical Association noted separately last year.
Research shows that it can save time and educate patients by answering many of the most frequently asked questions.
Away from doctors’ offices, some pharmaceutical companies are using ChatGPT to automate some of the process of discovering and researching new drugs.
One of the Gates Foundation’s priorities in the field of artificial intelligence is to ensure that these tools are used to solve health problems that affect poor people around the world, including AIDS, tuberculosis, and malaria. Altman noted that the technology is still in its infancy.
2024-01-20 18:46:40
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