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It's not a benchmark though, right? Because there's no control group or reference.

It's just an experiment on how different models interpret a vague prompt. "Generate an SVG of a pelican riding a bicycle" is loaded with ambiguity. It's practically designed to generate 'interesting' results because the prompt is not specific.

It also happens to be an example of the least practical way to engage with an LLM. It's no more capable of reading your mind than anyone or anything else.

I argue that, in the service of AI, there is a lot of flexibility being created around the scientific method.

 help



For 2026 SOTA models I think that is fair.

For the last generation of models, and for today's flash/mini models, I think there is still a not-unreasonable binary question ("is this a pelican on a bicycle?") that you can answer by just looking at the result: https://simonwillison.net/2024/Oct/25/pelicans-on-a-bicycle/


RLHF (reinforcement learning from human feedback) is to a large extent about resolving that ambiguity by simply polling people for their subjective judgement.

I've worked one an RLHF project for one of the larger model providers, and the instructions provided to the reviewers were very clear that if there was no objective correct answer, they were still required to choose the best answer, and while there were of course disagreements in the margins, groups of people do tend to converge on the big lines.


So if it can generate exactly what you had in mind based presumably on the most subtle of cues like your personal quirks from a few sentences that could be _terrifying_, right?



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