Abran
1
Hey folks, Community Ambassador and Admin here, thanks for joining our community. I’m happy to help you all with prompt design. A good way to start is to use your playground like a journal. Every time you get an idea, try it out in the playground and save the session. I suggest always starting by clearly stating your intent and goal in the playground. Zero shot is overrated. Some examples of things that I’ve created:
Tutoring bot
Business idea generator
Press Release writer
Biopic film treatment generator
Film production budget generator
Drug indication summarizer
HR Training Expert
Marvel superhero AI
Historical figure AI
Poetry interpreter
Legal advice for police encounters
and others.
Feel free to reach out if you get stuck or have an idea you’d like to flesh out.
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Hi, I’m interested in tutoring bot for kids, do you have idea from where to start ?
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Hey @Abran, I’ve been using GPT to translate stuff and I’m pretty satisfied by the production tool I’ve built for myself.
Now I’d like to create a prompt that turns movie scripts into novels. Assisting the AI is ok, but it seems I can’t make it go in the right direction using the same approach I had for translations.
Do you have any idea / related experience?
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joey
4
I feel like a tutor’s job is largely to answer questions in an easy-to-understand way, and the student’s job is just to keep asking questions. If I were to go about making a tutoring bot, I’d thus start with the Q&A bot, and give examples for whatever field you want the bot to be in (e.g. English, math, history, etc.).
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bram
5
A tutoring bot is also a great opportunity to determine what subject and level you are teaching towards. Being specific in the prompt will go a long way!
I think it would be very interesting if anyone making “bots” would somehow standardize them a bit (share the prompts and memory logic) so others could try them out.
i also think it would be interesting to have a “bot playground” where different bots could interact with each other to make it easier to build edu story worlds etc.
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Abran
7
It’s hard to say without seeing the prompt but I would always start with the intention and give it a few exemplary models. Are you trying to go single shot?
Abran
8
Claira needs friends. @Merzmensch
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Abran
9
Pick a subject and grade level. Involve some educators or subject matter experts so they can help you script real world scenarios. And they can respond to a student in an authentic way as a teacher would. GPT-3 will begin to pick up on the pattern.
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Hi, I’m new to OpenAI. Interested on Business idea generator. How could I make it work on playground?
Abran
12
I think there are a few different approaches. I think now, some may go with Answers endpoints but you can also go with few shot examples.
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Hey @Abran, I think adding an instruction before the example is enough. Thanks. Keep in touch.
Abran
14
Yes, I always start with detailed instructions. It helps to set the stage. Good luck!
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Hey @Abran I am creating a historical figure chatbot but it easily mislead to give untrue answers. Please see the screenshot:
Einstein did not have a brother but it says it did because I suggested it in the question. How can I make the AI answer factually? In the case I shared the AI should have said “I did not have a brother”.
It seems like it is very easy to mislead the AI.
I think GPT-3 is mixing up people in the Einstein lineage. Zero-shot factual question answering is very tricky unless the questions are very easy. I think of GPT-3 as being trained on how to write, and sound human, in the English language. It’s dangerous to think of GPT-3 as being trained on the truth. Sure, some facts from the internet are easy for GPT-3 to get right, but generally GPT-3 is pretty dumb when it comes to knowing or deducing or inferring the truth.
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georgei
19
There are notes about the bias, patterns of the engine.
Albert Einstein has always been a topic in news, research, entertainment.
So is expected that information to mix.