There are certain words that AI-generated text uses a lot. For example, 'depicting' is one of those words. There are a few more words that humans typically do not use in daily conversation or writing, but AI must use them to sound different and avoid copyrights. It is an interesting problem.
Conversation
Notices
-
nixCraft 🐧 (nixcraft@mastodon.social)'s status on Sunday, 31-Dec-2023 04:36:44 JST nixCraft 🐧 -
nixCraft 🐧 (nixcraft@mastodon.social)'s status on Sunday, 31-Dec-2023 04:40:28 JST nixCraft 🐧 People who speak multiple languages typically master 300 words and use them to express everything. However, AI can access vast resources and use a much larger vocabulary than we don't usually use. It is just my observation.
-
Randy (randyyy@mastodon.social)'s status on Sunday, 31-Dec-2023 06:02:26 JST Randy @nixCraft so if people read closely they can find out you used ChatGPT?
-
Nazo (nazokiyoubinbou@mastodon.social)'s status on Sunday, 31-Dec-2023 07:54:03 JST Nazo @nixCraft It says "depicting" a lot because it's not "AI." LLMs are built on models that were broken down to keywords. The irony is, this is actually a scenario where it is a word humans use a lot because they were describing images, situations, etc with those keywords. For example, "an image depicting a group of dogs playing poker" to describe a certain famous painting. (It goes into more detail than that, but you get the idea.)
You have to remember for LLMs, everything is keywords.
-
heydorka (heydorka@mastodon.social)'s status on Sunday, 31-Dec-2023 15:30:16 JST heydorka @nixCraft well, I think your observation might not be generally true. It depends on the life situation, how many books they read, what do they use the language for, etc. I, for one, speak 3 languages and learnt 2 other, understand 2 more. I definitely use more words on my non-native languges every day.
-
EJ (machineyearning@mastodon.social)'s status on Sunday, 31-Dec-2023 22:28:50 JST EJ @nixCraft maybe talk to more polyglots – it's probably closer to 10K than 300.
-