While most people might think of hallucinating as something that afflicts the human brain, Dictionary.com actually had artificial intelligence in mind when it picked "hallucinate" as its word of the ...
The Word of the Year is AI related. Credit: Mashable / Bob Al-Greene Dictionary.com has announced their Word of the Year for 2023 and, in a move that should surprise few, it is related to the boom in ...
This year, artificial intelligence dominated public discourse, from the discoveries of what large language models like ChatGPT are capable of to pondering the ethics of creating an image of Pope ...
On Wednesday, Cambridge Dictionary announced that its 2023 word of the year is "hallucinate," owing to the popularity of large language models (LLMs) like ChatGPT, which sometimes produce erroneous ...
“Hallucinate” is Dictionary.com’s word of the year — and no, you’re not imagining things. The online reference site said in an announcement Tuesday that this year’s pick refers to a specific ...
Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. Bruce Y. Lee, M.D., MBA, covers health, medicine, wellness and science ...
No, you didn't "hallucinate." That is the Word of the Year, according to Dictionary.com, amid a year of increasing artificial intelligence interference in our day-to-day lives. The announcement ...
AI, including AI Overviews on Google Search, can hallucinate and often make up stuff or offer contradicting answers when ...
Artificial intelligence has impacted just about everything in 2023. The word of the year is no exception. Dictionary.com announced its word of the year was “hallucinate,” but in the AI sense, not the ...
AI chatbots like OpenAI's ChatGPT, Microsoft Corp.'s (NASDAQ:MSFT) Copilot and others can sometimes generate responses or output that is nonsensical. This is known as hallucination. While it does ...