Ai can't match human creativity, says Fields Medalist Manjul Bhargava

Copyright © HT Digital Streams Limit all rights reserved. The comments come at a time when companies around the world invest in AI-related infrastructure, and up-and-up programs only when there is an imminent fear that AI will replace human work. Summary, while acknowledging that AI is a powerful technology that will have a profound impact on society and economy, and emphasize the global mathematicians that children should be encouraged to enjoy math — ‘math to help develop creativity and problem-solving skills. The fear of artificial intelligence (AI) that soon exceeds man has been inundated, and results in mathematics being assured. AI is nowhere close to obtaining critical thinking or to achieve scientific breakthrough that people are capable of, they said. While acknowledging that AI is a powerful technology that will have a profound impact on society and economy, they emphasize that children should be encouraged to enjoy math — ‘math for the sake of creativity and problem-solving skills. “… that deep kind of critical thinking, analytical thinking, that keeps us to give new knowledge, that AI is not really doing yet, and whether it will be now or not, it is still an open question,” Manjul Bhargava, Professor of Mathematics at Princeton University, who awarded the Fields Medal in 2014 for his work. “It will take years for it to do the kind of critical thinking, analytical thinking, new creation, kind of creativity needed to make scientific and mathematical breakthroughs. It’s not really close yet.” The prestigious Fields Medal -Dear, named after Canadian mathematician John Charles Fields, is considered the Nobel Prize for Mathematics. His remarks come at a time when businesses around the world invest in AI-related infrastructure, and up-and-up programs only when there is an imminent fear that AI will replace human work. In fact, Microsoft, IBM, Tata Consultancy Services (TCS), Amazon and Meta are some of the firms that employees have been deployed as AI about hierarchies. But the work that AI can do today is still traced back to the content that is being fed in it. Bhargava pointed out that AI will solve problems in the next two years because it would have read all undergraduate math and scientific books and, through major language learning models, “mimic the types of solutions in all these books”. He rejected the idea that mathematicians were concerned about AI. “No, there’s not so much fear. There’s more excitement. Right now, there’s a lot of humor and laughter about the kind of answers that AI gives to slightly more complicated math questions … But it’s not necessarily about everything people know, in the sentence, it doesn’t really do critical thinking, it does pattern that matches”. V. Kumar Murty, who teaches math at the University of Toronto, Canada, told Mint that the job losses seen at companies are temporary. “What we really need to think about is, okay, if certain work disappears, what new job will it make possible, it doesn’t exist now? What new opportunities will it create for me that does not exist now? ‘ Murty, who emphasized the post of director of the Fields Institute for Research in Mathematical Sciences, Canada, emphasized the need to encourage math learning for the sake of the subject and to move away from learning or focusing only on admission exams for an engineering seat. In India, more than 1.3 million students have appeared for this year’s engineering access test in an effort to ensure admission to one of the 23 Indian Institutes of Technology (IIT’s) or other engineering institutions funded by the government. For many students, the road to a reliable engineering college goes through coaching centers such as Kota and Sikar (Rajasthan). The professors want the prospects to change. “The engine of innovation is math. What is Google? This is linear algebra. The robotic fabric is calculation geometry. Satellite transfer is polynomial over finite fields. Any piece of technology used today, on its root, math … Optimistic that classroom education goes beyond crayon boards and there is importance to interdisciplinary education where subjects are not offered, depending on the degrees with the belief that one is better than the other. Bhargava is the first themed program, Murty is the director of the Institute.