Chinese scientists claim AI is capable of spontaneous human-like understanding
Chinese researchers claim to have found evidence that large language models (LLMs) can comprehend and process natural objects like human beings. This, they suggest, is done spontaneously even without being explicitly trained to do so.
According to the researchers from the Chinese Academy of Sciences and South China University of Technology in Guangzhou, some AIs (like ChatGPT or Gemini) can mirror a key part of human cognition, which is sorting information.
Their study, published in Nature Machine Intelligence, investigated whether LLM models can develop cognitive processes similar to those of human object representation. Or, in other words, to find out if LLMs can recognize and categorize things based on function, emotion, environment, etc.
To discover if this is the case, the researchers gave AIs 'odd-one-out' tasks using either text (for ChatGPT-3.5) or images (for Gemini Pro Vision). To this end, they collected 4.7 million responses across 1,854 natural objects (like dogs, chairs, apples, and cars).
They found that of the models created, sixty-six conceptual dimensions were created to organize objects, just the way humans would. These dimensions extended beyond basic categories (such as 'food') to encompass complex attributes, including texture, emotional relevance, and suitability for children.
The scientists also found that multimodal models (combining text and image) aligned even more closely with human thinking, as AIs process both visual and semantic features simultaneously. Furthermore, the team discovered that brain scan data (neuroimaging) revealed an overlap between how AI and the human brain respond to objects.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CB7NNsI27ks&pp=ygUOY2FuIExMTXMgdGhpbms%3D
The findings are interesting and provide, it appears, evidence that AI systems might be capable of genuinely 'understanding' in a human-like way, rather than just mimicking responses. It also suggests that future AIs could have more intuitive, human-compatible reasoning, which is essential for robotics, education, and human-AI collaboration.
However, it is also important to note that LLMs don't understand objects the way humans do emotionally or experientially.
AIs work by recognizing patterns in language or images that often correspond closely to human concepts. While that may appear to be 'understanding' on the surface, it's not based on lived experience or grounded sensory-motor interaction.
Also, some parts of AI representations may correlate with brain activity, but this doesn't mean they can 'think' like humans or share the same architecture.
If anything, they can be thought of as more of a sophisticated facsimile of human pattern recognition rather than a thinking machine. LLMs are more like a mirror made from millions of books and pictures, reflecting those models at the user based on learned patterns.
The study's findings suggest that LLMs and humans might be converging on similar functional patterns, such as organizing the world into categories. This challenges the view that AIs can only 'appear' smart by repeating patterns in data.
But, if, as the study argues, LLMS are starting to build conceptual models of the world independently, it would mean that we could be edging closer to artificial general intelligence (AGI)—a system that can think and reason across many tasks like a human.
You can access the study in the journal Nature Machine Intelligence.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
28 minutes ago
- Yahoo
BlackRock's Virtual Investment Analyst ‘Asimov' Ushers in AI Era on Wall Street
'Hey AI, maximize my portfolio returns,' is a prompt that has moved from speculative fiction to Wall Street. Last week, BlackRock, the world's largest asset manager, unveiled an AI research platform called 'Asimov' at the company's investor day in New York. Chief Operating Officer Rob Goldstein described the research platform as a 'virtual investment analyst' that can scan text in research notes, regulatory filings and emails to produce 'portfolio insights.' READ ALSO: Act of GENIUS or Blockheaded Bill? Congress Considers Stablecoins and Can Blue Origin Fill NASA's SpaceX Void? BlackRock isn't the first, nor will it be the last, asset manager to pick up AI tools as Wall Street firms jockey for a competitive edge. Systematic hedge fund manager Man Group AHL, which has been using machine learning techniques for over a decade, described how the firm was using it to be more productive in a July 2024 report. Man AHL was developing chatbots that could understand the firm's internally developed code. It involved testing processes in which ChatGPT scanned 200-page offering circulars for catastrophe bonds and input relevant information into a template that another person would review. ChatGPT could also answer investor queries, extracting relevant information from company documents including fact sheets, presentations, and investment commentaries. AI might also analyze macroeconomic data at the level of a junior quantitative analyst. Others have deployed AI for portfolio construction: Bridgewater Associates CEO Nir Bar Dea stated at a Bloomberg Invest conference earlier this year that a fund launched in 2024, which utilizes machine learning to make decisions, delivered performance comparable to its human-led counterparts. Researchers at Stanford Graduate School of Business built an AI analyst that bested humans, beating 93% of human fund managers over 30 years by an average of 600%. The bot was fed portfolio data from about 3,300 actively managed US stock mutual funds between 1990 and 2020 and nosed out alpha by tweaking fund holdings once every quarter. *AI Alpha: The academic exercise showed that, in hindsight, publicly available information wasn't fully exploited. Though Stanford's AI analyst was able to shoot the lights out in hindsight, it wouldn't necessarily outperform in today's market. And here's the rub: 'If every investor were using this tool, then much of the advantage would go away,' Suzie Noh, assistant professor of accounting, said in an interview with the university. This post first appeared on The Daily Upside. To receive delivering razor sharp analysis and perspective on all things finance, economics, and markets, subscribe to our free The Daily Upside newsletter. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data


Tom's Guide
32 minutes ago
- Tom's Guide
OpenAI wants to be your next Google — here's how close it is
OpenAI and its ChatGPT platform have been growing by leaps and bounds since launching nearly three years ago. And CEO Sam Altman hasn't been shy about wanting to supplant tech giants like Google. Altman wants ChatGPT to become as ubiquitous Google, where you use it because it's there and easy to access everywhere. This is no real surprise as Altman has pitched himself as an AI optimist and leader of movement toward AI adoption. You can see this in a blog post he posted last week called "The Gentle Singularity." It's a fairly vigorous treatise on AI and the coming future. ChatGPT is already more powerful than any human who has ever lived. "In some big sense, ChatGPT is already more powerful than any human who has ever lived," Altman wrote. "Hundreds of millions of people rely on it every day and for increasingly important tasks." With that in mind, Axios recently obtained information from an internal presentation that appears to show ChatGPT skyrocketing past competitor's like xAI's Grok and Anthropic's Claude. This data shows ChatGPT hitting 5.5 billion monthly views with rapid growth since 2023. Meanwhile, Grok and Claude are closer to 180 million and 100 million visitors, respectively. To be fair to those companies, Claude is focused more on business uses and Grok only really came to prominence in the last year. Get instant access to breaking news, the hottest reviews, great deals and helpful tips. According to Axios, the presentation also featured a similar advantage in mobile users. "ChatGPT's adoption continues to accelerate relative to other AI tools," the presentation allegedly reads. In the last few months we've seen more and more information that ChatGPT and other AI tools are chipping away at Google's stronghold. This past February a new study found that people are ditching Google for AI tools because they have better search. Plus, OpenAI has signed deals with multiple companies including a surprise deal with Google that popped up last week. Right now, ChatGPT underpins Siri's current AI capabilities as Apple struggles to implement better Apple Intelligence features around a stumbling Siri 2.0. Like Google did before, we can see that OpenAI wants to lock users into its ecosystem. This means, it wants to make it harder for you to leave; like making ChatGPT your default search engine. It's similar to how most people are unlikely to switch to iOS from Android, or vice versa, once you're deep into the Android ecosystem. If the numbers are real and people keep flocking to ChatGPT, then it might not be long until Google is on the same level — or just below — OpenAI's tool. Google isn't going down without a fight. The company's Gemini AI assistant has equally been growing and until Google's ongoing monopoly lawsuits resolve, the company has the advantage in that it can integrate Gemini in products from Android phones to wearables and later this year or next headsets and smart glasses like Samsung's Project Moohan and Xreal's Project Aura.


Tom's Guide
2 hours ago
- Tom's Guide
This epic ChatGPT discount is too good to resist if you run a small team — save 96%
Yes, ChatGPT can be yours to use completely free of charge. But these days, all of the good features are locked behind a paywall. The good news is that if you've been eyeing up some of the fancier features of ChatGPT, now is a great time to test them out. Right now, OpenAI is offering a pretty hefty 96% discount on ChatGPT Teams. While that sounds like something that you would need your own business for, anybody can sign up for ChatGPT Teams, offering access to some of the best paid for features to up to five people on one account. The first step in getting this deal is to head over to this link on the ChatGPT website. There you will see a discounted version of ChatGPT Teams, showing the price down from $30/£30 a month to just $1/£1. The deal only lasts for one month, but can be accessed by up to five people in that time. When you arrive on this page, it will ask you to either sign in to your account, or create a new one to verify your eligibility for the promotion. Even if you already have an account, you can still get the discount. Once you've signed in or created a new account, simply continue through and make the $1/£1 payment. If you know you don't want to pay the $30/£30 the following month, head to the account settings and go into manage subscription or plan section. From here, there will be a team plan section which will allow you to cancel. Once your account is created, you'll be asked to set up a workspace. From here, you can invite people to join that workspace and get access to all of the features of ChatGPT Teams. The Teams plan is one step up from ChatGPT Pro. That includes higher limits on the model's output and a faster performance. You can tailor ChatGPT to your work file uploads, projects and lock its memory to the files that you work with most. This plan includes dedicated workspaces. This allows you to organize AI interactions into departments, projects and general structures. This is especially useful if you're wanting to keep images, conversations and ideas in separate areas. One of the most useful features of this plan, especially for businesses is that ChatGPT doesn't train off any data produced by a Team account. This means you can upload work files or come up with ideas safely. It includes unlimited access to GPT-4o — ChatGPT's advanced reasoning model and offers all of the important advanced features of ChatGPT like the ability to analyse visual data and generate images. If you decide to keep the plan past the first month, everything revolves around the interactions of a team, allowing you to manage users, set up admin controls and give different account members roles and levels of access.