“Hallucinating” AI models help coin Cambridge Dictionary’s word of the year

Cambridge: “When an artificial intelligence hallucinates, it produces false information.”

A screenshot of the Cambridge Dictionary website where it announced its 2023 word of the year,

Enlarge / A screenshot of the Cambridge Dictionary website where it announced its 2023 word of the year, "hallucinate." (credit: Cambridge Dictionary)

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 information. The Dictionary also published an illustrated site explaining the term, saying, "When an artificial intelligence hallucinates, it produces false information."

"The Cambridge Dictionary team chose hallucinate as its Word of the Year 2023 as it recognized that the new meaning gets to the heart of why people are talking about AI," the dictionary writes. "Generative AI is a powerful tool but one we’re all still learning how to interact with safely and effectively—this means being aware of both its potential strengths and its current weaknesses."

As we've previously covered in various articles, "hallucination" in relation to AI originated as a term of art in the machine learning space. As LLMs entered mainstream use through applications like ChatGPT late last year, the term spilled over into general use and began to cause confusion among some, who saw it as unnecessary anthropomorphism. Cambridge Dictionary's first definition of hallucination (for humans) is "to seem to see, hear, feel, or smell something that does not exist." It involves perception from a conscious mind, and some object to that association.

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Here’s why SpaceX really needed to change out that part on Starship

Grid fins have been essential to the landing of 230 rockets.

Photograph of a Falcon 9 booster interstage

Enlarge / Falcon 9 interstage from the right. Note grid fins. (credit: Lee Hutchinson)

SpaceX's Starship rocket did not launch on Friday morning from South Texas as intended because the company had to replace the actuator on a grid fin. The rocket is now being prepared for a launch during a tight window on Saturday morning, from 7 to 7:20 am local time.

Here's an explanation of why grid fins are so important to the rocket's flight—or, more precisely, its landing.

A little Falcon 9 history

The better part of a decade ago, SpaceX maneuvered an autonomous drone ship into the Atlantic Ocean for the first time with the intent of catching a falling rocket.

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Huawei Connect Paris: Huawei setzt auf Flash-Speicher für weniger Stromverbrauch

Huawei-Vorstand Yang Chaobin hat in seiner Keynote neue Versionen der Speichersysteme Oceanstor Pacific und Oceanstor Dorado vorgestellt. Schwerpunkt war Stromsparen durch Flash. (Storage, Computer)

Huawei-Vorstand Yang Chaobin hat in seiner Keynote neue Versionen der Speichersysteme Oceanstor Pacific und Oceanstor Dorado vorgestellt. Schwerpunkt war Stromsparen durch Flash. (Storage, Computer)

Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 7 Gen 3 promises big boosts in graphics and AI performance

Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 7 series processors are designed for upper mid-range smartphones, delivering a more cost-efficient alternative to the company’s flagship Snapdragon 8 series chips. But the latest Snapdragon 7 chip should bring signifi…

Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 7 series processors are designed for upper mid-range smartphones, delivering a more cost-efficient alternative to the company’s flagship Snapdragon 8 series chips. But the latest Snapdragon 7 chip should bring significant performance gains over last year’s version. The new Snapdragon 7 Gen 3 processor is expected to deliver up to a 15% boost in […]

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