Users are excited about Princeton research on measuring intelligence beyond human scale because it sparks eagerness to discuss the ideas further with the researchers involved.
Based on 2 visible X reactions from 2 accounts; directional sample.
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@spokutta Very much looking forward to talking to you @spokutta!
@HazanPrinceton Cool! Will bug you tomorrow about it!!
How do we measure intelligence beyond human scale? In 1904, Spearman proposed measuring “general intelligence”, or (g), via psychometrics. But what happens when humans no longer know what questions to ask—or even verify answers? Our latest paper: https://arxiv.org/abs/2607.07040
vignette that would surely be appreciated by my colleague @sirbayes, in this same 1904 study, Spearman essentially launched the statistical field of factor analysis.
@spokutta Very much looking forward to talking to you @spokutta!
How do we measure intelligence beyond human scale? In 1904, Spearman proposed measuring “general intelligence”, or (g), via psychometrics. But what happens when humans no longer know what questions to ask—or even verify answers? Our latest paper: https://arxiv.org/abs/2607.07040
vignette that would surely be appreciated by my colleague @sirbayes, in this same 1904 study, Spearman essentially launched the statistical field of factor analysis.
Users are excited about Princeton research on measuring intelligence beyond human scale because it sparks eagerness to discuss the ideas further with the researchers involved.
Based on 2 visible X reactions from 2 accounts; directional sample.
Ask a question below.
Published answers will appear here.