Thanks for writing this! On the point of how to get information, mentors themselves seem like they should also be able to say a lot of useful things (though especially for more subjective points, I would put more weight on what previous mentees say!)
So since I’m going to be mentoring for MATS and for CHAI internships, I’ll list my best guesses as to how working with me will be like, maybe this helps someone decide:
In terms of both research experience and mentoring experience, I’m one of the most junior mentors in MATS.
Concretely, I’ve been doing ML research for ~4 years and AI safety research for a bit over 2 of those. I’ve co-mentored two bigger projects (CHAI internships) and mentored ~5 people for smaller projects or more informally.
This naturally has disadvantages. Depending on what you’re looking for, it can also have advantages, for example it might help for creating a more collaborative atmosphere (as opposed to a “boss” dynamic like the post mentioned). I’m also happy to spend time on things that some senior mentors might be too busy for (like code reviews, …).
Your role as a mentee: I’m mainly looking for either collaborators on existing projects, or for mentees who’ll start new projects that are pretty close to topics I’m thinking about (likely based on a mix of ideas I already have and your ideas). I also have a lot of engineering work to be done, but that will only happen if it’s explicitly what you want—by default, I’m hoping to help mentees on a path to developing their own alignment ideas. That said, if you’re planning to be very independent and just develop your own ideas from scratch, I’m probably not the best mentor for you.
I live in Berkeley and am planning to be in the MATS office regularly (e.g. just working there and being available once/week in addition to in-person meetings). For (in-person) CHAI internships, we’d be in the same office anyway.
If you have concrete questions about other things, whose answer would make a difference for whether you want to apply, then definitely feel free to ask!
Strong +1 to asking the mentor being a great way to get information! My guess is many mentors aren’t going out of their way to volunteer this kind of info, but will share it if asked. Especially if they’ve already decided that they want to work with you.
My MATS admission doc has some info on that for me, though I can give more detailed answers if anyone emails me with specific questions.
Thanks for writing this! On the point of how to get information, mentors themselves seem like they should also be able to say a lot of useful things (though especially for more subjective points, I would put more weight on what previous mentees say!)
So since I’m going to be mentoring for MATS and for CHAI internships, I’ll list my best guesses as to how working with me will be like, maybe this helps someone decide:
In terms of both research experience and mentoring experience, I’m one of the most junior mentors in MATS.
Concretely, I’ve been doing ML research for ~4 years and AI safety research for a bit over 2 of those. I’ve co-mentored two bigger projects (CHAI internships) and mentored ~5 people for smaller projects or more informally.
This naturally has disadvantages. Depending on what you’re looking for, it can also have advantages, for example it might help for creating a more collaborative atmosphere (as opposed to a “boss” dynamic like the post mentioned). I’m also happy to spend time on things that some senior mentors might be too busy for (like code reviews, …).
Your role as a mentee: I’m mainly looking for either collaborators on existing projects, or for mentees who’ll start new projects that are pretty close to topics I’m thinking about (likely based on a mix of ideas I already have and your ideas). I also have a lot of engineering work to be done, but that will only happen if it’s explicitly what you want—by default, I’m hoping to help mentees on a path to developing their own alignment ideas. That said, if you’re planning to be very independent and just develop your own ideas from scratch, I’m probably not the best mentor for you.
I live in Berkeley and am planning to be in the MATS office regularly (e.g. just working there and being available once/week in addition to in-person meetings). For (in-person) CHAI internships, we’d be in the same office anyway.
If you have concrete questions about other things, whose answer would make a difference for whether you want to apply, then definitely feel free to ask!
Strong +1 to asking the mentor being a great way to get information! My guess is many mentors aren’t going out of their way to volunteer this kind of info, but will share it if asked. Especially if they’ve already decided that they want to work with you.
My MATS admission doc has some info on that for me, though I can give more detailed answers if anyone emails me with specific questions.