Jensen Huang, CEO of Nvidia: Every time I receive a response from AI, I always ask

AI Image:Chat GPT



Jensen Huang, the CEO of Nvidia, has compared his use of chatbots that use artificial intelligence (AI) to a patient seeking multiple medical opinions. His approach, which emphasizes that he doesn't rely on just one AI for answers, offers guidance on how to optimize the accuracy of AI chatbot responses. Rather, he confers with several AIs and invites them to comment on each other's answers.

Huang described his approach in a recent interview on CNN's "Fareed Zakaria GPS": "I wouldn't just accept an answer from an AI. "Are you sure this is the best answer you can provide?" is what I usually say.

"This is just the same as getting three different opinions, you know. The views of three physicians. That's what I do. I pose the same query to several AIs. And after they have compared each other's notes, I ask them to give me the best response possible," Huang said.

Jensen Huang claims that occasionally, before responding to a question, he asks AI to treat him like a 12-year-old.
Huang has previously talked about his personal use of AI. He revealed that he uses AI "as a tutor everyday" during the 28th annual Milken Institute Global Conference in May.

"In areas that are fairly new to me, I might say, 'Start by explaining it to me like I'm a 12-year-old,' and then work your way up into a doctorate-level over time," he says, tailoring the explanations to his own learning requirements.

When Zakaria asked Huang about the possible effects of AI on cognitive abilities, Huang revealed his AI habits. An MIT study that suggested using ChatGPT and similar tools for writing tasks "came at a cognitive cost" to participants was cited by Zakaria.

Jensen Huang acknowledged that he had not read the MIT study, but he is adamant that his "cognitive skills are actually advancing" even though he uses AI "literally every single day."


He disputed the notion that the use of AI leads to decline in critical thinking by saying, "I'm not exactly sure what people are using it for that would cause you to not have to think, but you have to think."

"When I engage with AI, it is a questioning system. You're asking questions about it. To think of good questions, you must be thinking. You have to be able to think critically. "You have to be thinking independently," he said.

Among tech leaders, Huang is not the only one incorporating AI into their daily tasks. In a May interview with Bloomberg, Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella also disclosed that he uses Microsoft Copilot to do things like summarize emails and get ready for meetings.




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