Facebook Pixel Scientists find a new way to spot AI 'hallucinations' | Time - news - Read this story on Magzter.com

Try GOLD - Free

Scientists find a new way to spot AI 'hallucinations'

Time

|

July 15, 2024

Today’s generative artificial intelligence (AI) tools often confidently assert false information. Computer scientists call this behavior “hallucination”

- By Billy Perrigo - Illistration by Peter Reynols

Scientists find a new way to spot AI 'hallucinations'

Today’s generative artificial intelligence (AI) tools often confidently assert false information. Computer scientists call this behavior “hallucination,” and it has led to some embarrassing public slip-ups. In February, Air Canada was forced by a tribunal to honor a discount that its customer- support chatbot had mistakenly offered to a passenger. In May, Google made changes to its new “AI overviews” search feature, after it told some users that it was safe to eat rocks. And in June 2023, two lawyers were fined $5,000 after one of them used ChatGPT to help him write a court filing. The chatbot had added fake citations to the submission, which pointed to cases that never existed.

But at least some types of AI hallucinations could soon be a thing of the past. New research, published June 19 in the peer-reviewed journal Nature, describes a new method for detecting when an AI tool is likely to be hallucinating. The method is able to discern between correct and incorrect AI- generated answers approximately 79% of the time, which is about 10 percentage points higher than other leading strategies. The results could pave the way for more- reliable AI systems in the future.

MORE STORIES FROM Time

Time

Time

In Cuba: To be, or not to be

WHAT BECOMES OF CUBA? THIS ENDURING AND already freighted question has acquired dizzying new dimensions in the aftermath of the U.S. military operation that extracted Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro.

time to read

4 mins

May 11, 2026

Time

Time

Waiting for spring in Havana

The hour has come. It is time for Cuba's dictatorship to meet its end.

time to read

2 mins

May 11, 2026

Time

Time

What Cuba needs

I grew up in Cuba in the 1980s. We learned to live with less: less food, less variety, less privacy, and less control over our own futures. But the basic social contract of the Cuban revolution still persisted in my childhood.

time to read

2 mins

May 11, 2026

Time

Time

Alphabet THE CLAIRVOYANT

MANY YEARS AGO, SUNDAR PICHAI WAS SCUBA DIVING with his family in Hawaii when the weather turned unexpectedly rough.

time to read

14 mins

May 11, 2026

Time

Climate Is Everything

Political independents are increasingly worried about climate change, according to the latest Gallup environment poll, conducted in March and released April 14.

time to read

1 min

May 11, 2026

Time

Time

THE CUBA QUESTION

ANXIOUS ISLANDERS WONDER WHAT PRESIDENT TRUMP'S \"DONROE DOCTRINE\" MEANS FOR THEIR COUNTRY

time to read

2 mins

May 11, 2026

Time

Time

Beast Industries

PICTURE FRAMES, MATTRESSES, A DOOR, OTHER household debris—oh look, a discarded flowerpot—litter the front yard of a Greenville, N.C., mansion one March afternoon.

time to read

12 mins

May 11, 2026

Time

Time

THE FIGHTING ILLINI

IT’S ST. PATRICK’S DAY IN CHICAGO, AND JB PRITZKER IS ON A BOAT cruising down the city’s green-dyed river.

time to read

12 mins

May 11, 2026

Time

Time

Margaret Atwood'

The author on trad wives, double agents, the power of teenage girls, and Hulu's adaptation of her 2019 novel, The Testaments

time to read

2 mins

May 11, 2026

Time

Time

What happens if banks start collecting citizenship details?

AMERICAN BANKS MAY SOON BE REQUIRED TO collect citizenship information from customers, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said at the Semafor World Economy summit on April 13, and an Executive Order is already “in process” that would mandate that banks gather such information.

time to read

3 mins

May 11, 2026

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size