The Results | Collaborating with ChatGPT: A Playful Spin on Vintage Verse
UPDATE:
Did you catch the bot? Below are the answers! Check your answers using the email you were sent after submitting the survey!
Flip open the boxes below to reveal the answers! Or if you'd still like to test yourself, the button below will continue to take you to the survey. After completing it, check your answers using the email you receive!
Breakdown of the Results
A total of 21 guesses were submitted with the following percentage breakdown correct (using the author name to identify the limerick, in order, as below)
Kebabian – 67% correct
Richards – 71% correct
Hall – 57% correct
MacDonald – 62% correct
Nisenson – 86% correct
Seliger – 71% correct
With today’s vast advancements in technology, we now have access to a wealth of knowledge and resources at our fingertips. One such technology that has become extremely popular is ChatGPT, a language model developed by OpenAI that uses deep learning algorithms to generate human-like responses to text-based questions. With its vast knowledge-base and ability to adapt to various topics, ChatGPT is being used for everything from answering trivia questions to the development of customer service chatbots.
As someone who enjoys writing, I was skeptical of using ChatGPT but, ultimately, decided to give it a try for some lighthearted experimentation. I asked ChatGPT to rewrite a few limericks composed by members of the Optical Society of America (OSA/Optica) during a 1976 meeting held in Tucson. * What are your thoughts? Can you identify which limerick is the original and which is ChatGPT’s contemporary take?
After you click the big red button below to play and submit your guesses, you'll receive an email with your guesses so that you can refer to them when we reveal the bot limericks in the next Watts Up! on April 20th. See how well you can pick out the AI poet then!
* Original limericks published in “Optical Sciences Center Weekly,” 10-29-1976 and 11-5-1976.