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bkolobara | 1 month ago
I have a suspicion that extensive use of LLMs can result in damage to your brain. That's why we are seeing so many mental health issues surfacing up, and we are getting a bunch of blog posts about "an agentic coding psychosis".
It could be that llms go from bicycles for the brain to smoking for the brain, once we figure out the long term effects of it.
BrenBarn|1 month ago
That is quite untrue. It is true that people may be slightly slower or less accurate in distinguishing colors that are within a labeled category than those that cross a category boundary, but that's far from saying they can't perceive the difference at all. The latter would imply that, for instance, English speakers cannot distinguish shades of blue or green.
bkolobara|1 month ago
[0]: https://youtu.be/RKK7wGAYP6k?si=GK6VPP0yoFoGyOn3 [1]: https://youtu.be/I64RtGofPW8?si=v1FNU06rb5mMYRKj&t=889
jstanley|1 month ago
Perhaps you mean to say that speakers are unable to name the difference between the colours?
I can easily see differences between (for example) different shades of red. But I can't name them other than "shade of red".
I do happen to subscribe to the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis, in the sense that I think the language you think in constrains your thoughts - but I don't think it is strong enough to prevent you from being able to see different colours.
bkolobara|1 month ago
EDIT: I have been searching for the source of where I saw this, but can't find it now :(
EDIT2: I found a talk touching in the topic with a study: https://youtu.be/I64RtGofPW8?si=v1FNU06rb5mMYRKj&t=889
skywhopper|1 month ago
bonzini|1 month ago
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wine-dark_sea
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linguistic_relativity_and_the_...