By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
Online Tech Guru
  • News
  • PC/Windows
  • Mobile
  • Apps
  • Gadgets
  • More
    • Gaming
    • Accessories
    • Editor’s Choice
    • Press Release
Reading: AI Isn’t Smarter Than a Baby—Yet
Best Deal
Font ResizerAa
Online Tech GuruOnline Tech Guru
  • News
  • Mobile
  • PC/Windows
  • Gaming
  • Apps
  • Gadgets
  • Accessories
Search
  • News
  • PC/Windows
  • Mobile
  • Apps
  • Gadgets
  • More
    • Gaming
    • Accessories
    • Editor’s Choice
    • Press Release
What lessons have developers learned from external development?

What lessons have developers learned from external development?

News Room News Room 15 July 2026
FacebookLike
InstagramFollow
YoutubeSubscribe
TiktokFollow
  • Subscribe
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
  • Terms of Use
© Foxiz News Network. Ruby Design Company. All Rights Reserved.
Online Tech Guru > News > AI Isn’t Smarter Than a Baby—Yet
News

AI Isn’t Smarter Than a Baby—Yet

News Room
Last updated: 15 July 2026 19:57
By News Room 5 Min Read
Share
AI Isn’t Smarter Than a Baby—Yet
SHARE

If you think an artificial intelligence model running on thousands of cutting-edge computer chips is smart, allow me to introduce you to the concept of a 1-year-old.

OK, so babies might not be able to write computer programs, solve advanced math problems, or debate philosophical ideas. But unlike today’s AI models, which consume an ocean’s worth of training data and as much energy as a small country, babies learn to make sense of the world with amazing efficiency. They identify new objects after seeing them once or twice, and they learn through fleeting observation and physical interaction.

When it comes to improving AI, babies—and the architecture of their brains—might hold crucial insights. Building a more baby-like version of AI could make frontier models less costly and less energy intensive, and it might also be valuable if AI-powered robots are to learn about their environments in a more natural way.

To explore this bold new frontier, researchers at Meta, Stanford University, the University of Tokyo, and France’s École Normale Supérieure developed a new test that highlights the learning skills of babies and pushes AI researchers to design algorithms that match them.

The EgoBabyVLM Challenge judges how well vision language models, or VLMs, which learn from both text and imagery, can make sense of the world as a baby sees it. It requires a model to describe the world after ingesting about a thousand hours of video collected from cameras strapped to the heads of infants and toddlers. (Yes, really.)

It turns out that the cutting-edge models fail miserably when fed this realistic and messy footage, which suggests there may be something different about the design of the baby brain that enables it to learn so rapidly from so little information.

Instead of curated datasets, babies learn from a kaleidoscopic view of things: parents talking about objects that are no longer visible, indicating things using their gaze or a gesture, or discussing events from the past or in the future rather than whatever’s happening right then. Babies learn not just from language but also from a rich multimodal and tactile experience, says Michael Frank, a cognitive scientist at Stanford University who specializes in language learning and was involved with EgoBabyVLM’s development.

The test shows that when it comes to AI, “it’s clear that there’s more [than just language] that’s needed,” Frank says.

Language Learning

EgoBabyVLM is just the latest example of how scientists are using AI to explore human intelligence. A challenge called BabyLM, introduced in 2023, tasked AI models with learning the syntax of language using about the same amount of data a 10-year-old takes in—tens of millions of words, compared to trillions for AI models. Remarkably, it turns out that transformer-based AI models—which process language by paying attention to the relationship between words across different sentences—can do this quite well, a finding that challenges Noam Chomsky’s ideas concerning how syntax may be hardwired into the human brain.

Ryan Cotterell, a linguist at ETH Zurich who first developed BabyLM, says the situation is different when it comes to understanding the physical world. “There isn’t going to be a large corpus of human interactions—there’s no internet of human interactions,” he says.

Joshua Tenenbaum, a cognitive scientist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, notes that BabyLM showed models do not acquire “common sense” about the physical world, social dynamics, or theory of mind.

“Transformers are very good at finding patterns in data,” says Tenenbaum. “But it does seem that just pure pattern learning systems are not able to take the kind of data that a baby or a child receives and learn all the things that they do.”

Share This Article
Facebook Twitter Copy Link
Leave a comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Suno snatched millions of songs from YouTube, Genius, and Deezer

Suno snatched millions of songs from YouTube, Genius, and Deezer

News Room News Room 15 July 2026
FacebookLike
InstagramFollow
YoutubeSubscribe
TiktokFollow

Trending

Something’s glowing on the Pixel 11’s camera bar

A new teaser for Google’s upcoming Pixel 11 lineup reveals that the phones will feature…

15 July 2026

Former Rockstar Producer Explains Why GTA 6 Won’t Have PC Port on Launch

A former Rockstar Games producer has explained why the developer's PC versions usually come long…

15 July 2026

Womanizer Coupons: Save 15% in July

Since 2014, Womanizer has been satisfying people with vulvas all over the world. Thanks to…

15 July 2026
News

Thinking Machines Lab Drops Its First Model

Thinking Machines Lab Drops Its First Model

Thinking Machines Lab, an artificial intelligence company started by exiles from OpenAI, has released its first model, called Inkling. The startup’s new model is open-weight, which means that researchers and…

News Room 15 July 2026

Your may also like!

8BitDo’s FlipPad is the most pocketable way to turn your phone into a Game Boy
News

8BitDo’s FlipPad is the most pocketable way to turn your phone into a Game Boy

News Room 15 July 2026
“We thought, well, how would we reinvent this wheel?” – Minecraft specialists 4J Studios on building a new sandbox crafting game from first principles
Gaming

“We thought, well, how would we reinvent this wheel?” – Minecraft specialists 4J Studios on building a new sandbox crafting game from first principles

News Room 15 July 2026
Lionel Messi’s Final World Cup—and the Death of Early Retirement
News

Lionel Messi’s Final World Cup—and the Death of Early Retirement

News Room 15 July 2026
Samsung shows off ‘brand new shape’ for Z Fold 8 in Spider-Man teaser
News

Samsung shows off ‘brand new shape’ for Z Fold 8 in Spider-Man teaser

News Room 15 July 2026

Our website stores cookies on your computer. They allow us to remember you and help personalize your experience with our site.

Read our privacy policy for more information.

Quick Links

  • Subscribe
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
  • Terms of Use
Advertise with us

Socials

Follow US
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?