How familiar are you with Chollet’s paper “On the Measure of Intelligence”? He disagrees a bit with the idea of “AGI” but if you operationalize it as “skill acquisition efficiency at the level of a human” then he has a test called ARC which purports to measure when AI has achieved human-like generality.
This seems to be a good direction, in my opinion. There is an ARC challenge on Kaggle and so far AI is far below the human level. On the other hand, “being good at a lot of different things”, ie task performance across one or many tasks, is obviously very important to understand and Chollet’s definition is independent from that.
ARC is a nice attempt. I also participated in the original challenge on Kaggle. The issue is that the test can be gamed (as anyone on Kaggle did) brute forcing over solution strategies.
An open-ended or interactive version of ARC may solve this issue.
How familiar are you with Chollet’s paper “On the Measure of Intelligence”? He disagrees a bit with the idea of “AGI” but if you operationalize it as “skill acquisition efficiency at the level of a human” then he has a test called ARC which purports to measure when AI has achieved human-like generality.
This seems to be a good direction, in my opinion. There is an ARC challenge on Kaggle and so far AI is far below the human level. On the other hand, “being good at a lot of different things”, ie task performance across one or many tasks, is obviously very important to understand and Chollet’s definition is independent from that.
ARC is a nice attempt. I also participated in the original challenge on Kaggle. The issue is that the test can be gamed (as anyone on Kaggle did) brute forcing over solution strategies.
An open-ended or interactive version of ARC may solve this issue.