MATS has the following features that might be worth considering:
Empowerment: Emphasis on empowering scholars to develop as future “research leads” (think accelerated PhD-style program rather than a traditional internship), including research strategy workshops, significant opportunities for scholar project ownership (though the extent of this varies between mentors), and a 4-month extension program;
Diversity: Emphasis on a broad portfolio of AI safety research agendas and perspectives with a large, diverse cohort (50-60) and comprehensive seminar program;
Support: Dedicated and experienced scholar support + research coach/manager staff and infrastructure;
Buck Shlegeris, Ethan Perez, Evan Hubinger, and Owain Evans are mentoring in both programs. The links show their MATS projects, “personal fit” for applicants, and (where applicable) applicant selection questions, designed to mimic the research experience.
Astra seems like an obviously better choice for applicants principally interested in:
AI governance: MATS has no AI governance mentors in the Winter 2023-24 Program, whereas Astra has Daniel Kokotajlo, Richard Ngo, and associated staff at ARC Evals and Open Phil;
Worldview investigations: Astra has Ajeya Cotra, Tom Davidson, and Lukas Finnvedan, whereas MATS has no Open Phil mentors;
ARC Evals: While both programs feature mentors working on evals, only Astra is working with ARC Evals;
MATS has the following features that might be worth considering:
Empowerment: Emphasis on empowering scholars to develop as future “research leads” (think accelerated PhD-style program rather than a traditional internship), including research strategy workshops, significant opportunities for scholar project ownership (though the extent of this varies between mentors), and a 4-month extension program;
Diversity: Emphasis on a broad portfolio of AI safety research agendas and perspectives with a large, diverse cohort (50-60) and comprehensive seminar program;
Support: Dedicated and experienced scholar support + research coach/manager staff and infrastructure;
Network: Large and supportive alumni network that regularly sparks research collaborations and AI safety start-ups (e.g., Apollo, Leap Labs, Timaeus, Cadenza, CAIP);
Experience: Have run successful research cohorts with 30, 58, 60 scholars, plus three extension programs with about half as many participants.
Buck Shlegeris, Ethan Perez, Evan Hubinger, and Owain Evans are mentoring in both programs. The links show their MATS projects, “personal fit” for applicants, and (where applicable) applicant selection questions, designed to mimic the research experience.
Astra seems like an obviously better choice for applicants principally interested in:
AI governance: MATS has no AI governance mentors in the Winter 2023-24 Program, whereas Astra has Daniel Kokotajlo, Richard Ngo, and associated staff at ARC Evals and Open Phil;
Worldview investigations: Astra has Ajeya Cotra, Tom Davidson, and Lukas Finnvedan, whereas MATS has no Open Phil mentors;
ARC Evals: While both programs feature mentors working on evals, only Astra is working with ARC Evals;
AI ethics: Astra is working with Rob Long.