• News
  • Technology News
  • Tech News
  • Google DeepMind CEO Demis Hassabis on why AI can win Maths Olympiad but fails to solve basic problems of High School Maths

Google DeepMind CEO Demis Hassabis on why AI can win Maths Olympiad but fails to solve basic problems of High School Maths

Google DeepMind CEO Demis Hassabis highlights AI inconsistency as a major hurdle to achieving Artificial General Intelligence (AGI). While AI excels in complex tasks, it falters in simpler ones, a problem that cannot be solved by merely increasing data and computing power.
Google DeepMind CEO Demis Hassabis on why AI can win Maths Olympiad but fails to solve basic problems of High School Maths
Google DeepMind CEO Demis Hassabis has said that inconsistency in artificial intelligence (AI) is a major reason why AI can perform exceptionally well in some areas but still fail at simpler tasks. Speaking on the “Google for Developers” podcast, Hassabis said that advanced AI models like Google’s Gemini can win gold medals at the International Mathematical Olympiad but often struggle to solve basic high school maths problems.“The lack of consistency in AI is a major barrier to achieving AGI,” he said, referring to Artificial General Intelligence — the stage where AI can reason like humans. This, according to Demis Hassabis, is what is holding back the technology from reaching its full potential.During the interaction, Demis Hassabis also referred to Google CEO Sundar Pichai’s description of the current state of AI as “AJI” — artificial jagged intelligence — a term used for describing systems that excel in certain tasks but fail in others.Google DeepMind CEO Demis Hassabis also stressed that solving AI’s inconsistency problem will take more than just increasing data and computing power. “We need better testing and new, more challenging benchmarks to determine precisely what the models excel at and what they don’t,” Hassabis said.
The debate over AGI continues to divide the tech industry. Hassabis has previously taken a more cautious view of its arrival compared to Google co-founder Sergey Brin, calling for higher standards before declaring that AI has reached that level.

OpenAI CEO Sam Altman takes a u-turn on AGI

OpenAI CEO Sam Altman who earlier suggested that the AI term – AGI aka Artificial General Intelligence is "just around the corner” has taken a u-turn. At CNBC’s “Squawk Box” last week, Altman was asked whether the company’s latest GPT-5 model moves the world any closer to achieving AGI. Replying to the question, Sam Altman said “I think it’s not a super useful term”. He said the challenge with AGI is that different companies and people define it in different ways. One definition, he explained, is an AI that can do “a significant amount of the work in the world.” But this has problems, as the type of work people do keeps changing.“I think the point of all of this is it doesn’t really matter and it’s just this continuing exponential of model capability that we’ll rely on for more and more things,” he added.
Can These AI Glasses Replace Your Phone? Ray-Ban Meta Glasses Tested
author
About the Author
TOI Tech Desk

The TOI Tech Desk is a dedicated team of journalists committed to delivering the latest and most relevant news from the world of technology to readers of The Times of India. TOI Tech Desk’s news coverage spans a wide spectrum across gadget launches, gadget reviews, trends, in-depth analysis, exclusive reports and breaking stories that impact technology and the digital universe. Be it how-tos or the latest happenings in AI, cybersecurity, personal gadgets, platforms like WhatsApp, Instagram, Facebook and more; TOI Tech Desk brings the news with accuracy and authenticity.

End of Article
Follow Us On Social Media