OpenAI unveils new models designed to think more before answering

13 September 2024, 11:34

The logo and name of the technology company OpenAI on a smarthpone
London. UK-03.01.2023. The logo and name of the technology company OpenAI which developed the ChatGPT. Picture: PA

The OpenAI o1 series of AI models are designed to help with complex tasks and harder problems, the company said.

ChatGPT maker OpenAI has unveiled a new range of AI models designed to spend more time thinking before they respond, with the aim of reasoning more before helping to solve more complex tasks or problems.

Unlike its mainstream ChatGPT chatbot, the OpenAI o1 series cannot yet browse the web for information or receive image uploads.

However, OpenAI said the models had been trained to spend more time thinking through problems input into them before responding “much like a person would”, and said the models were now able to “refine their thinking process, try different strategies and recognise their mistakes”.

In a blog post detailing the new models, which remain early preview versions, OpenAI said the o1 series works best when dealing with mathematics and coding tasks.

“These enhanced reasoning capabilities may be particularly useful if you’re tackling complex problems in science, coding, math, and similar fields,” the company said.

“For example, o1 can be used by healthcare researchers to annotate cell sequencing data, by physicists to generate complicated mathematical formulas needed for quantum optics, and by developers in all fields to build and execute multi-step workflows.”

Alongside the main version, OpenAI said it was also rolling out a “faster, cheaper” version called o1-mini which it said was “particularly effective” at coding.

“As a smaller model, o1-mini is 80% cheaper than o1-preview, making it a powerful, cost-effective model for applications that require reasoning but not broad world knowledge,” OpenAI said.

The announcement highlights how the AI firm is looking to diversify beyond just ChatGPT its accompanying tools for consumers, as it looks to capitalise on the AI frenzy.

Earlier this week, it was reported that the company was in talks with investors to raise 6.5 billion dollars (£5 billion) at a valuation of 150 billion dollars (£115 billion), making it one of the most valuable start-ups in the world.

In addition to the announcements around its new models, OpenAI also revealed that it had “formalised agreements” with AI safety institutes in the UK and US, and confirmed it had granted both institutes “early access to a research version” of the new models.

“This was an important first step in our partnership, helping to establish a process for research, evaluation, and testing of future models prior to and following their public release,” OpenAI said.

By Press Association

More Technology News

See more More Technology News

The TikTok app logo displayed on a mobile phone screen

Cat videos not a security threat, says minister as he rules out UK TikTok ban

The ban is due to come into force on Sunday (James Manning/PA)

Don’t follow America with TikTok ban, says Alba MSP

The US Supreme Court rejected TikTok’s appeal and unanimously upheld the law banning the app (PA)

‘No plans’ for UK TikTok ban

TikTok content creators have blasted the Supreme Court's ruling to ban TikTok in the US

Content creator in the US compares the TikTok ban to 'prohibition' as others decry Supreme Court ruling

A UK licence card with the older paper counterpart

Ministers set to unveil plans for digital driving licences

TikTok logo on a black screen on a phone which is being held in front of a computer keyboard

British content creators call looming US TikTok ban ‘deeply unfair’

A mobile phone showing the TikTok app

Q&A: What does the future hold for TikTok?

TikTok has been banned in the US.

TikTok to be banned in the US from Sunday, Supreme Court rules

Apple artificial intelligence

Apple pauses AI-generated news alerts over inaccuracy issues

The Nintendo Switch console (Game/PA)The Nintendo Switch console (Game/PA)

Lisa Nandy reveals she has ‘put a lot of hours’ into video game Animal Crossing

Nintendo Switch 2

Nintendo Switch 2 to be released in 2025

A child using a mobile phone

Age verification to be required on any site hosting pornography, Ofcom says

A general view of Chat GPT website

ChatGPT users can now give it tasks to do in the future

A phone displaying the Twitter account for Elon Musk

Elon Musk sued by US markets regulator over Twitter stake disclosure

Elon Musk is being sued for failing to disclose his purchase of Twitter stocks before buying the company in 2022, which ‘allowed him to underpay’ by at least $150m (£123m).

US sues Musk for failing to disclose Twitter stock holdings to buy platform at ‘artificially low prices’

The back of an ambulance

IBM to supply tech for new Emergency Services Network