Core Points - OpenAI researchers claimed that GPT-5 "discovered" solutions to 10 unsolved mathematical problems, leading to public misconceptions that GPT-5 independently solved these problems, which were later revealed to be existing literature [1][10][12] Group 1: Claims and Misunderstandings - On October 12, Sebastien Bubeck tweeted that GPT-5 excelled in literature search by identifying that Erdős Problem 339 had been solved 20 years ago, despite being listed as unsolved in the official database [3][4] - Following this, researchers Mark Sellke and Mehtaab used GPT-5 to investigate other Erdős problems, claiming to have found solutions to 10 problems and partial progress on 11 others [7][8] - The initial excitement was short-lived as Google DeepMind's CEO, Demis Hassabis, pointed out the misunderstanding, leading to clarifications from mathematician Thomas Bloom [10][11][12] Group 2: Reactions and Clarifications - Thomas Bloom described OpenAI's statements as a "dramatic misunderstanding," clarifying that the problems were marked as unsolved due to his lack of awareness of existing solutions, not because they were unsolved in the mathematical community [12] - Bubeck later deleted his post and apologized, emphasizing the value of AI in literature search rather than as a mathematician [13][14] - The incident sparked discussions about the balance between scientific rigor and public promotion within the AI community, highlighting the potential for AI to assist in mundane research tasks rather than solving complex problems independently [31][28]
OpenAI「解决」10道数学难题?哈萨比斯直呼「尴尬」,LeCun辛辣点评
3 6 Ke·2025-10-19 07:49