The models, first reported by Reuters, are capable of reasoning
through complex tasks and can solve more challenging problems
than previous models in science, coding and math, the AI firm
said in a blog post.
OpenAI used the code name Strawberry to refer to the project
internally, while it dubbed the models announced on Thursday o1
and o1-mini. The o1 will be available in ChatGPT and its API
starting Thursday, the company said.
Noam Brown, a researcher at OpenAI focused on improving
reasoning in the company's models, confirmed in a post on social
media platform X that the models were the same as the Strawberry
project.
"I'm excited to share with you all the fruit of our effort at
OpenAI to create AI models capable of truly general reasoning,"
Brown wrote.
In its blog post, OpenAI said the o1 model scored 83% on the
qualifying exam for the International Mathematics Olympiad,
compared with 13% for its previous model, GPT-4o.
The model also improved performance on competitive programming
questions and exceeded human PhD-level accuracy on a benchmark
of science problems, the company said.
Brown said the models were able to accomplish the scores by
incorporating a technique known as "chain-of-thought" reasoning,
which involves breaking down complex problems into smaller
logical steps.
Researchers have noted that AI model performance on complex
problems tends to improve when the approach has been used as a
prompting technique. OpenAI has now automated this capability so
the models can break down problems on their own, without user
prompting.
"We trained these models to spend more time thinking through
problems before they respond, much like a person would. Through
training, they learn to refine their thinking process, try
different strategies, and recognize their mistakes," OpenAI
said.
Reuters was the first to report OpenAI's work on the reasoning
project, then called Q*, in November 2023. It reported in July
that the project had come to be known as Strawberry.
(Reporting by Akash Sriram in Bengaluru, Katie Paul in New York
and Anna Tong in San Francisco; Editing by Alan Barona and
Leslie Adler)
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