What is ‘model collapse’? An expert explains the rumors about an impending AI doom (2024)

Artificial intelligence (AI) prophets and newsmongers are forecasting the end of the generative AI hype, with talk of an impending catastrophic “model collapse”.

But how realistic are these predictions? And what is model collapse anyway?

Discussed in 2023, but popularized more recently, “model collapse” refers to a hypothetical scenario where future AI systems get progressively dumber due to the increase of AI-generated data on the internet.

The need for data

Modern AI systems are built using machine learning. Programmers set up the underlying mathematical structure, but the actual “intelligence” comes from training the system to mimic patterns in data.

But not just any data. The current crop of generative AI systems needs high quality data, and lots of it.

To source this data, big tech companies such as OpenAI, Google, Meta and Nvidia continually scour the internet, scooping up terabytes of content to feed the machines. But since the advent of widely available and useful generative AI systems in 2022, people are increasingly uploading and sharing content that is made, in part or whole, by AI.

In 2023, researchers started wondering if they could get away with only relying on AI-created data for training, instead of human-generated data.

There are huge incentives to make this work. In addition to proliferating on the internet, AI-made content is much cheaper than human data to source. It also isn’t ethicallyandlegallyquestionable to collect en masse.

However, researchers found that without high-quality human data, AI systems trained on AI-made data get dumber and dumber as each model learns from the previous one. It’s like a digital version of the problem of inbreeding.

This “regurgitive training” seems to lead to a reduction in the quality and diversity of model behavior. Quality here roughly means some combination of being helpful, harmless and honest. Diversity refers to the variation in responses, and which people’s cultural and social perspectives are represented in the AI outputs.

In short: by using AI systems so much, we could be polluting the very data source we need to make them useful in the first place.

Avoiding collapse

Can’t big tech just filter out AI-generated content? Not really. Tech companies already spend a lot of time and money cleaning and filtering the data they scrape, with one industry insider recently sharing they sometimes discard as much as 90% of the data they initially collect for training models.

These efforts might get more demanding as the need to specifically remove AI-generated content increases. But more importantly, in the long term it will actually get harder and harder to distinguish AI content. This will make the filtering and removal of synthetic data a game of diminishing (financial) returns.

Ultimately, the research so far shows we just can’t completely do away with human data. After all, it’s where the “I” in AI is coming from.

Are we headed for a catastrophe?

There are hints developers are already having to work harder to source high-quality data. For instance, the documentation accompanying the GPT-4 release credited an unprecedented number of staff involved in the data-related parts of the project.

We may also be running out of new human data. Some estimates say the pool of human-generated text data might be tapped out as soon as 2026.

It’s likely why OpenAI and others are racing to shore up exclusive partnerships with industry behemoths such as Shutterstock, Associated Press and NewsCorp. They own large proprietary collections of human data that aren’t readily available on the public internet.

However, the prospects of catastrophic model collapse might be overstated. Most research so far looks at cases where synthetic data replaces human data. In practice, human and AI data are likely to accumulate in parallel, which reduces the likelihood of collapse.

The most likely future scenario will also see an ecosystem of somewhat diverse generative AI platforms being used to create and publish content, rather than one monolithic model. This also increases robustness against collapse.

It’s a good reason for regulators to promote healthy competition by limiting monopolies in the AI sector, and to fund public interest technology development.

The real concerns

There are also more subtle risks from too much AI-made content.

A flood of synthetic content might not pose an existential threat to the progress of AI development, but it does threaten the digital public good of the (human) internet.

For instance, researchers found a 16% drop in activity on the coding website StackOverflow one year after the release of ChatGPT. This suggests AI assistance may already be reducing person-to-person interactions in some online communities.

Hyperproduction from AI-powered content farms is also making it harder to find content that isn’t clickbait stuffed with advertisem*nts.

It’s becoming impossible to reliably distinguish between human-generated and AI-generated content. One method to remedy this would be watermarking or labelling AI-generated content, as I and many others have recently highlighted, and as reflected in recent Australian government interim legislation.

There’s another risk, too. As AI-generated content becomes systematically hom*ogeneous, we risk losing socio-cultural diversity and some groups of people could even experience cultural erasure. We urgently need cross-disciplinary research on the social and cultural challenges posed by AI systems.

Human interactions and human data are important, and we should protect them. For our own sakes, and maybe also for the sake of the possible risk of a future model collapse.What is ‘model collapse’? An expert explains the rumors about an impending AI doom (1)

Aaron J. Snoswell, Research Fellow in AI Accountability, Queensland University of Technology

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

What is ‘model collapse’? An expert explains the rumors about an impending AI doom (2024)

References

Top Articles
23 Vegan Tempeh Recipes
Homemade Gluten Free Wonton Wrappers | Gluten Free Asian Recipes | Healthy gf Asian
19 Awesome Things to Do in Redmond, Oregon
Kokomoscanner
Reports of romance scams hit record highs in 2021
Dana Point: Your Ultimate Guide to Coastal Adventures
Psf Condition Permanent Sad Face
Wow Genesis Mote Farm
Academic Calendar Biola
Busted Newspaper Longview Texas
Ippa 番号
Public Agent.502
United Center: Home of the Chicago Bulls & Chicago Blackhawks - The Stadiums Guide
Shaw Centre for the Salish Sea — Eight Arms, Eight Interesting Facts: World Octopus Day
Jcpenney Associate Meevo
The Meaning Behind The Song: Waymore's Blues by Waylon Jennings - Beat Crave
Trinket Of Advanced Weaponry
Adt First Responder Discount
Do people over 65 pay federal income tax?
Premier Auto Works-- The House Of Cash Car Deals
The Courier from Waterloo, Iowa
Hotleak.vip
Ethiopia’s PM pledges victory in video from front line
Taxi Driver Kdrama Dramacool
Robert Rushing Net Worth, Daughter, Age, and Wikipedia
Adventhealth Employee Handbook 2022
Apartments / Housing For Rent near Trenton, NJ - craigslist
Missing 2023 Showtimes Near Lucas Cinemas Albertville
Drug Stores Open 24Hrs Near Me
Ap Computer Science Principles Grade Calculator
Edt National Board
Unit 9 Exam Joshua'S Law - dawson
Advance Auto.parts Near Me
7 Little Words 4/6/23
Mike Temara
South Louisiana Community College Bookstore
Anker GaNPrime™️ | Our Best Multi-Device Fast Charging Lineup
Craigslist Palm Desert California
Kirby D. Anthoney Now
Paper Io 2 Unblocked Games Premium
Jbz Inlog
80s Z Cavaricci Pants
Craigslist Tools Las Cruces Nm
Hannaford Weekly Flyer Manchester Nh
Bible Gateway Lookup
Famous Church Sermons
Jcp Meevo Com
Gowilkes For Rent
Oriley Auto Parts Hours
Ebony Ts Facials
Joy Ride 2023 Showtimes Near Mjr Chesterfield
Finally, US figure skaters will get Beijing Olympic gold medals — under Eiffel Tower
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Fr. Dewey Fisher

Last Updated:

Views: 6313

Rating: 4.1 / 5 (62 voted)

Reviews: 93% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Fr. Dewey Fisher

Birthday: 1993-03-26

Address: 917 Hyun Views, Rogahnmouth, KY 91013-8827

Phone: +5938540192553

Job: Administration Developer

Hobby: Embroidery, Horseback riding, Juggling, Urban exploration, Skiing, Cycling, Handball

Introduction: My name is Fr. Dewey Fisher, I am a powerful, open, faithful, combative, spotless, faithful, fair person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.