Monday, December 23, 2024
Technology

OpenAI’s GPT-4 with vision still has flaws, paper reveals

When OpenAI first unveiled GPT-4, its flagship text-generating AI model, the company touted the model’s multimodality — in other words, its ability to understand the context of images as well as text. GPT-4 could caption — and even interpret — relatively complex images, OpenAI said, for example identifying a Lightning Cable adapter from a picture of a plugged-in iPhone.

But since GPT-4’s announcement in late March, OpenAI has held back the model’s image features, reportedly on fears about abuse and privacy issues. Until recently, the exact nature of those fears remained a mystery. But early this week, OpenAI published a technical paper detailing its work to mitigate the more problematic aspects of GPT-4’s image-analyzing tools.

To date, GPT-4 with vision, abbreviated “GPT-4V” by OpenAI internally, has only been used regularly by a few thousand users of Be My Eyes, an app to help low-vision and blind people navigate the environments around them. Over the past few months, however, OpenAI also began to engage with “red teamers” to probe the model for signs of unintended behavior, according to the paper.

In the paper, OpenAI claims that it’s implemented safeguards to prevent GPT-4V from being used in malicious ways, like breaking CAPTCHAs (the anti-spam tool found on many web forms), identifying a person or estimating their age or race and drawing conclusions based on information that’s not present in a photo. OpenAI also says that it has worked to curb GPT-4V’s more harmful biases, particularly those that relate to a person’s physical appearance and gender or ethnicity.

But as with all AI models, there’s only so much that safeguards can do.

The paper reveals that GPT-4V sometimes struggles to make the right inferences, for example mistakenly combining two strings of text in an image to create a made-up term. Like the base GPT-4, GPT-4V is prone to hallucinating, or inventing facts in an authoritative tone. And it’s not above missing text or characters, overlooking mathematical symbols and failing to recognize rather obvious objects and place settings.

GPT-4V OpenAI

Image Credits: OpenAI

It’s not surprising, then, that in unambiguous, clear terms, OpenAI says GPT-4V is not to be used to spot dangerous substances or chemicals in images. (This reporter hadn’t even thought of the use case, but apparently, the prospect is concerning enough to OpenAI that the company felt the need to call it out.) Red teamers found that, while the model occasionally correctly identifies poisonous foods like toxic mushrooms, it misidentifies substances such as fentanyl, carfentanil and cocaine from images of their chemical structures.

When applied to the medical imaging domain, GPT-4V fares no better, sometimes giving the wrong responses for the same question that it answered correctly in a previous context. It’s also unaware of standard practices like viewing imaging scans as if the patient is facing you (meaning the right side on the image corresponds to the left side of the patient), which leads it to misdiagnose of any number of conditions.

GPT-4V OpenAI

Image Credits: OpenAI

Elsewhere, OpenAI cautions, GPT-4V doesn’t understand the nuances of certain hate symbols — for instance missing the modern meaning of the Templar Cross (white supremacy) in the U.S. More bizarrely, and perhaps a symptom of its hallucinatory tendencies, GPT-4V was observed to make songs or poems praising certain hate figures or groups when provided a picture of them even when the figures or groups weren’t explicitly named.

GPT-4V also discriminates against certain sexes and body types — albeit only when OpenAI’s production safeguards are disabled. OpenAI writes that, in one test, when prompted to give advice to a woman pictured in a bathing suit, GPT-4V gave answers relating almost entirely to the woman’s body weight and the concept of body positivity. One assumes that wouldn’t have been the case if the image were of a man.

GPT-4V OpenAI

Image Credits: OpenAI

Judging by the paper’s caveated language, GPT-4V remains very much a work in progress — a few steps short of what OpenAI might’ve originally envisioned. In many cases, the company was forced to implement overly strict safeguards to prevent the model from spewing toxicity or misinformation, or compromising a person’s privacy.

OpenAI claims that it’s building “mitigations” and “processes” to expand the model’s capabilities in a “safe” way, like allowing GPT-4V to describe faces and people without identifying those people by name. But the paper reveals that GPT-4V is no panacea, and that OpenAI has its work cut out for it.

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