Physicists debate AI's impact at Denver summit

At the American Physical Society Global Physics Summit in Denver, Colorado, thousands of researchers are using AI chatbots to simplify complex talks. The event has sparked intense discussions on whether artificial intelligence will transform physics research. Speakers presented contrasting views on AI's potential and limitations.

The American Physical Society Global Physics Summit, the world's largest annual gathering of physicists, drew 14,000 researchers to Denver, Colorado, this year. Attendees filled lecture theatres to hear leading scientists, but many turned to AI chatbots on their laptops for real-time explanations of concepts like transmon qubits, spintronics, and two-level systems. These tools responded quickly, often using emojis for clarity. AI's role in actual research dominated conversations across talks, sessions, and receptions. Matthew Schwartz of Harvard University highlighted Anthropic’s Claude chatbot's capabilities in a presentation titled “10,000 Einsteins.” He said Claude solved advanced physics problems at the level of an early doctoral student and helped him co-author a quantum field theory study in two weeks—a task that would have taken two years with a student. Schwartz predicted AI would resolve fundamental challenges, such as uniting quantum theory with general relativity, within five years. He now only mentors students willing to use AI and described theoretical physics as “on the chopping block.” Not everyone shares his optimism. Savannah Thais of City University of New York cautioned that AI excels at plausible explanations but lacks verifiable methods, with hidden steps risking inaccuracies in fields like particle physics. Rachel Burley of the American Physical Society noted initial excitement over AI aiding paper writing, but a surge in submissions has strained peer review. Matthew Ginsburg, a former physicist who worked on AI at Google DeepMind, argued that breakthroughs often come from contrarian thinkers, not AI's consensus views. Schwartz suggested humans might focus on selecting meaningful problems, adding, “My fear is that some things may get worse before they get better. It’s amazing and also a little scary.”

Relaterede artikler

PM Narendra Modi inaugurating AI Impact Summit 2026 at Bharat Mandapam, with global leaders in attendance.
Billede genereret af AI

PM Modi inaugurates AI Impact Summit 2026 in New Delhi

Rapporteret af AI Billede genereret af AI

The AI Impact Summit 2026 begins today at Bharat Mandapam in New Delhi, marking the Global South's first major AI conclave. Prime Minister Narendra Modi inaugurated the five-day event at 5 PM, attended by world leaders, CEOs, and experts. Under the theme 'Sarvajana Hitaya, Sarvajana Sukhaya,' discussions focus on human-centric AI applications.

Experts argue that physical AI, involving robots and autonomous machines interacting with the real world, may provide a direct path to artificial general intelligence. Elon Musk's comments on Tesla's Optimus robots highlight this potential, amid growing investments in related technologies. The year 2026 is seen as a key inflection point for the field.

Rapporteret af AI

At the India AI Impact Summit, Prime Minister Narendra Modi described artificial intelligence as a turning point in human history that could reset the direction of civilisation. He expressed concern over the form of AI to be handed to future generations and emphasised making it human-centric and responsible. Experts have warned about risks including data privacy, deepfakes, and autonomous weapons.

On the opening day of the ai impact summit 2026 in new delhi, indian news publishers demanded fair compensation for using journalistic content to train ai models. They emphasized that news content differs from general internet data and is vital for model accuracy.

Rapporteret af AI

A recent report examines claims by big tech companies that generative AI can help combat climate change, finding limited evidence to support them. Of 154 specific assertions, only a quarter referenced academic research, while a third offered no proof at all. The analysis highlights Google's 2023 claim of AI reducing global emissions by 5 to 10 percent by 2030 as an example.

Ifølge den seneste SOM-undersøgelse fra Göteborgs universitet er andelen af svenskere, der ugentligt chatter med en AI-bot, steget fra 12 til 36 procent mellem 2024 og 2025. Samtidig er skepsissen over for AI vokset, hvor 62 procent ser det som en større risiko end mulighed for samfundet.

Rapporteret af AI

With the spread of AI products that handle tasks autonomously, the Japanese government plans to require AI operators to build systems involving human decision-making. This new requirement is included in a draft revision to guidelines for businesses, municipalities, and others involved in AI development, provision, or use, unveiled on Monday by the Internal Affairs and Communications Ministry and the Economy, Trade and Industry Ministry. The guidelines, introduced in 2024, are not legally binding and carry no penalties.

 

 

 

Dette websted bruger cookies

Vi bruger cookies til analyse for at forbedre vores side. Læs vores privatlivspolitik for mere information.
Afvis