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AGI (Artificial General Intelligence)

Core Concepts

A hypothetical AI system that can understand, learn, and perform any intellectual task that a human can — unlike today's AI, which excels at specific tasks.

AGI refers to a theoretical AI that matches or exceeds human-level intelligence across all domains — not just chess, not just language, but everything. No AGI system exists today, despite what some headlines claim.

Current AI systems are 'narrow AI' — they're exceptional at specific tasks (translating text, generating images) but can't transfer that ability to unrelated domains the way humans can. GPT-4 writes brilliantly but can't tie a shoelace.

AGI is a major topic of debate in the AI community. Some researchers believe it's decades away, others think it could emerge within years. The distinction matters because AGI would fundamentally change society in ways narrow AI cannot.

Real-World Example

OpenAI's stated mission is to build AGI that benefits all of humanity. Whether they're close is hotly debated.

Related Terms

More in Core Concepts

FAQ

What is AGI (Artificial General Intelligence)?

A hypothetical AI system that can understand, learn, and perform any intellectual task that a human can — unlike today's AI, which excels at specific tasks.

How is AGI (Artificial General Intelligence) used in practice?

OpenAI's stated mission is to build AGI that benefits all of humanity. Whether they're close is hotly debated.

What concepts are related to AGI (Artificial General Intelligence)?

Key related concepts include AI (Artificial Intelligence), Narrow AI. Understanding these together gives a more complete picture of how AGI (Artificial General Intelligence) fits into the AI landscape.