𝗙𝗿𝗼𝗺 𝗔𝗚𝗜 𝘁𝗼 𝗔𝗦𝗜: 𝗔 𝗚𝗼𝗼𝗴𝗹𝗲 𝗗𝗲𝗲𝗽𝗠𝗶𝗻𝗱 𝗦𝘂𝗺𝗺𝗮𝗿𝘆
Most people talk about AGI as the end goal.
A recent Google DeepMind paper shifts the focus. It asks a harder question: What happens after AGI?
The paper distinguishes between two stages:
- AGI (Artificial General Intelligence): An AI that performs at the level of a median human across many tasks. It can reason, plan, and solve problems.
- ASI (Artificial Superintelligence): An AI that outperforms large groups of human experts across almost all domains.
ASI is not just a model that wins at chess or writes code. It is a system that can outperform entire research labs or companies.
The paper outlines four ways we move from AGI to ASI:
- Scaling: Using more data, more compute, and better hardware.
- Algorithmic Shifts: Finding better architectures like the Transformer, rather than just making models bigger.
- Recursive Self-Improvement: AI helping researchers write better AI code. This creates a feedback loop where AI accelerates its own development.
- Multi-Agent Systems: Moving from one giant model to thousands of specialized AI agents working together like a human organization.
However, several bottlenecks could slow this progress:
- Data Limits: We may run out of high-quality human text.
- Physical Constraints: Scaling requires massive amounts of energy, chips, and data centers.
- Research Difficulty: As AI improves, the remaining problems might become much harder to solve.
- Human Factors: Safety, regulation, and social resistance will shape the speed of development.
For engineers and developers, this is not just a philosophical debate. It is an engineering challenge.
The future of AI will depend on:
- Building reliable agent architectures.
- Improving long-term memory and tool use.
- Creating better ways to evaluate systems that exceed human capability.
- Managing distributed systems of multiple agents.
AGI is a milestone. ASI is a shift in scale.
Source: https://dev.to/marrouchi/from-agi-to-asi-a-summary-of-google-deepminds-latest-paper-2ndd