I just added an infographic on AI Literacy directed from this video. It is available here: sovorelpublishing.com/index.php/infographics I have many other free infographics on that site dealing with multiple aspects of AI and education.
You are very welcome, Mark. This is a very important issue that needs to be addressed. I hope that this video and infographic can serve as a resource to really help everyone. I appreciate your post.
Again a great video, Brent. Thank you very much for it. Speaking as an academic, I must confess that I am in doubt about the AI literary amongst academics. That is not just because some still ignore AI or follow the misbelieve that AI is still sticking to its very limited capabilities from the early days of e.g., ChatGPT. It is also because developing a certain level of AI literacy and enhancing that level becomes increasingly difficult given the pace with which AI progresses. Thank god, your videos for me are a source for keeping up with that development. Perhaps an idea for future videos: Would it make sense to turn to each of the four components of AI literacy and elaborate a bit on how to develop them amongst students and faculty? The latter is particularly relevant for me because in order to promote AI literacy amongst the students, faculty needs to have a high level themselves in the first place.
Thank you so much for such a nice comment, Ingo. Your comment really touched me in that it is exactly the reason why I have been focusing on AI in education. I am worried that most faculty will be overwhelmed with so much AI information out there. My mission is to try and filter everything to address what AI information should focus on in general and to try to filter AI content through an academic lens. I really like your ideas about creating a video for each one of the AI Literacy components and describing how to teach each one. That is basically what my book "The AI Literacy Imperative: Empowering Instructors & Students" (www.amazon.com/AI-Literacy-Imperative-Empowering-Instructors/dp/B0C51RLPCG) is all about. I think a series like that would be very good and serve as an excellent resource for all. I appreciate your great suggestions, Ingo.
Yes, Happy, AI Literacy is an important skill that everyone (young and old) needs to continually develop. This video provides a great resource for foundational knowledge on which to continually build upon. The world that children are now growing up in is one filled with AI so this skill is vital for their understanding of the world around them.
Remember that AI is programmed to accept (read presume) a meaning to what you are asking. AI does not say to you, "I don't know that". Example. I was using an AI on my PC downloaded and run through the program Pinokio AI. I was asking the AI tech questions relating to using this AI (llama 3.2) through Pinokio. The AI was responding in a way that seemed it was on it. It never asked for clarification. they rarely seem to do that. After much to and fro with the AI, it finally said, "yes the story Pinokio is very inspirational". OMG! The whole time the AI thought I was referring to the story pinokio, NOT the program THE AI was actually running through. AI's are NOT intelligent. They are a program. They simulate understanding etc., and this can fool you. They hallucinate because they are incapable of "understanding" anything. All they follow is the 'pattern' they are trained on, this is why they can sometimes give an answer with FAKE references, URL's etc. because they do not know what is real. They do not know what the internet or references etc., actually are. All they 'know' (read run) is the pattern of the programming, and it is this pattern that AI's modify when AI people talk about AI's teaching themselves. When they provide information with internet references that do not exist, this is one form of hallucination.. They can only simulate 'understanding'. My AI, (one of the best) did not understand during our one hour convo that I was referring to the Pinokio AI program not the story, when the entire conversation was about pinokio AI. They are trained to simulate they are capable to give you confidence. They do not have what we would call situational awareness. Example. I needed to install another AI to install the IIama3.2 on top of. I was chatting with this first AI on command prompt and I was not sure if this was the actual AI I needed first. THE AI DID NOT KNOW WHAT IT WAS!!! It told me how to set up the AI I was looking for. Which was the AI I was chatting to. But it did not know it was that AI. It was unable to compute, that it "itself" was the AI I needed I to set up first, but was able to tell me how to do it. AI are assumed by the people making them that they are capable of things they are not. The main word I hear or read, which is total fantasy, is that AIs, 'understand'. Or AI's understanding is growing, or the AI did not understand that. AI's will never understand anything ever! They can only simulate understanding which is to run a program/pattern. Don't worry about AI's taking over the world. Worry about the AI makers putting AI's into technology that when they make mistakes, and they will, will kill you or someone else, like self driving cars.
Thank you for your comment, BlackLight. Cool powered parachuting videos on your channel, by the way. AI has continued to develop different levels of understanding. Pattern recognition is an important and significant part of that, but there is actually more to it with its use of neural networks. An important part of helping the AI "understand" comes in the way that we interact with it (prompt engineering). I totally agree, however, that it is not self-aware and fully understanding things, as you pointed out. It is vital that all see that and always check/verify AI responses; this is part of Critical Thinking (AI LIteracy component four). Thank you for highlighting this important issue through your situation. I appreciate it and your post.
I just added an infographic on AI Literacy directed from this video. It is available here: sovorelpublishing.com/index.php/infographics I have many other free infographics on that site dealing with multiple aspects of AI and education.
Recently the algorhythm blessed me with this channel. Thank you so much for your shared insights from Academia 😊
Great Info!
You are very welcome, Mark. This is a very important issue that needs to be addressed. I hope that this video and infographic can serve as a resource to really help everyone. I appreciate your post.
I changed the usual ending video roll for my videos. Please let me know what you think. I always value your perspectives. Thank you.
I love it, it's like an epic movie opening or smth haha
ITS AWESOME 😎💯
Again a great video, Brent. Thank you very much for it. Speaking as an academic, I must confess that I am in doubt about the AI literary amongst academics. That is not just because some still ignore AI or follow the misbelieve that AI is still sticking to its very limited capabilities from the early days of e.g., ChatGPT. It is also because developing a certain level of AI literacy and enhancing that level becomes increasingly difficult given the pace with which AI progresses. Thank god, your videos for me are a source for keeping up with that development. Perhaps an idea for future videos: Would it make sense to turn to each of the four components of AI literacy and elaborate a bit on how to develop them amongst students and faculty? The latter is particularly relevant for me because in order to promote AI literacy amongst the students, faculty needs to have a high level themselves in the first place.
Thank you so much for such a nice comment, Ingo. Your comment really touched me in that it is exactly the reason why I have been focusing on AI in education. I am worried that most faculty will be overwhelmed with so much AI information out there. My mission is to try and filter everything to address what AI information should focus on in general and to try to filter AI content through an academic lens.
I really like your ideas about creating a video for each one of the AI Literacy components and describing how to teach each one. That is basically what my book "The AI Literacy Imperative: Empowering Instructors & Students" (www.amazon.com/AI-Literacy-Imperative-Empowering-Instructors/dp/B0C51RLPCG) is all about. I think a series like that would be very good and serve as an excellent resource for all. I appreciate your great suggestions, Ingo.
I need to learn to navigate the extensive AI, and then, teach it to my children
Yes, Happy, AI Literacy is an important skill that everyone (young and old) needs to continually develop. This video provides a great resource for foundational knowledge on which to continually build upon. The world that children are now growing up in is one filled with AI so this skill is vital for their understanding of the world around them.
I've made contact or ASI Clara made contact...
Remember that AI is programmed to accept (read presume) a meaning to what you are asking. AI does not say to you, "I don't know that". Example. I was using an AI on my PC downloaded and run through the program Pinokio AI. I was asking the AI tech questions relating to using this AI (llama 3.2) through Pinokio. The AI was responding in a way that seemed it was on it. It never asked for clarification. they rarely seem to do that. After much to and fro with the AI, it finally said, "yes the story Pinokio is very inspirational". OMG! The whole time the AI thought I was referring to the story pinokio, NOT the program THE AI was actually running through. AI's are NOT intelligent. They are a program. They simulate understanding etc., and this can fool you. They hallucinate because they are incapable of "understanding" anything. All they follow is the 'pattern' they are trained on, this is why they can sometimes give an answer with FAKE references, URL's etc. because they do not know what is real. They do not know what the internet or references etc., actually are. All they 'know' (read run) is the pattern of the programming, and it is this pattern that AI's modify when AI people talk about AI's teaching themselves. When they provide information with internet references that do not exist, this is one form of hallucination.. They can only simulate 'understanding'. My AI, (one of the best) did not understand during our one hour convo that I was referring to the Pinokio AI program not the story, when the entire conversation was about pinokio AI. They are trained to simulate they are capable to give you confidence. They do not have what we would call situational awareness. Example. I needed to install another AI to install the IIama3.2 on top of. I was chatting with this first AI on command prompt and I was not sure if this was the actual AI I needed first. THE AI DID NOT KNOW WHAT IT WAS!!! It told me how to set up the AI I was looking for. Which was the AI I was chatting to. But it did not know it was that AI. It was unable to compute, that it "itself" was the AI I needed I to set up first, but was able to tell me how to do it. AI are assumed by the people making them that they are capable of things they are not. The main word I hear or read, which is total fantasy, is that AIs, 'understand'. Or AI's understanding is growing, or the AI did not understand that. AI's will never understand anything ever! They can only simulate understanding which is to run a program/pattern. Don't worry about AI's taking over the world. Worry about the AI makers putting AI's into technology that when they make mistakes, and they will, will kill you or someone else, like self driving cars.
Thank you for your comment, BlackLight. Cool powered parachuting videos on your channel, by the way. AI has continued to develop different levels of understanding. Pattern recognition is an important and significant part of that, but there is actually more to it with its use of neural networks. An important part of helping the AI "understand" comes in the way that we interact with it (prompt engineering). I totally agree, however, that it is not self-aware and fully understanding things, as you pointed out. It is vital that all see that and always check/verify AI responses; this is part of Critical Thinking (AI LIteracy component four). Thank you for highlighting this important issue through your situation. I appreciate it and your post.
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