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alt="Encoding-Decoding Constellations by Rebecca Lin (Credit: Jimmy Day/MIT Media Lab)."
CSAIL article

To innovate as a technologist, you need to be a polyglot—fluent in multiple languages of problem-solving, able to synthesize ideas across domains, reframing puzzles to visualize different outcomes, and revealing the questions that have yet to be asked.

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Given the prompt “Make me a chair” and feedback “I want panels on the seat,” the robot assembles a chair and places panel components according to the user prompt (Credits: Courtesy of the researchers).
CSAIL article

Computer-aided design (CAD) systems are tried-and-true tools used to design many of the physical objects we use each day. But CAD software requires extensive expertise to master, and many tools incorporate such a high level of detail they don’t lend themselves to brainstorming or rapid prototyping.

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CSAIL’s approach uses an LLM to plan how to answer complex reasoning tasks, then divides the legwork of that strategy among smaller language models. Their method helps LMs provide more accurate responses than leading LLMs and approach the precision of top reasoning systems, while being more efficient than both (Credit: Alex Shipps/MIT CSAIL).
CSAIL article

As language models (LMs) improve at tasks like image generation, trivia questions, and simple math, you might think that human-like reasoning is around the corner. In reality, they still trail us by a wide margin on complex tasks. Try playing Sudoku with one, for instance, where you fill in numbers one through nine in such a way that each appears only once across the columns, rows, and sections of a nine-by-nine grid. Your AI opponent will either fail to fill in boxes on its own or do so inefficiently, though it can verify if you’ve filled yours out correctly.