this post was submitted on 24 Jan 2024
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I just did and it seems to understand.
Prompt: Can you explain why “I knew a woman who owned a taser. Man, was she stunning!” Is funny?
ChatGPT 3.5: The humor in this statement arises from a play on words. The word "stunning" is typically used to describe someone's appearance, suggesting they are exceptionally attractive. However, in this context, it's used in a different way, implying that the woman who owned a taser was stunning in the sense of being capable of stunning or shocking others. The unexpected twist creates a humorous juxtaposition between the two meanings of "stunning."
I did some playing around with ChatGPT's understanding of jokes a while back and I found that it actually did best on understanding puns, which IMO isn't surprising since it's a large language model and puns are deeply rooted in language and wordplay. It didn't so so well at jokes based on other things but it still sometimes managed to figure them out too.
I remember discussing the subject in a Reddit thread and there was a commenter who was super enthused by the notion of an AI that understood humour because he himself was autistic and never "got" any jokes. He wanted an AI companion that would let him at least know when a joke was being said, so he wouldn't get confused and flustered. I had to warn him that ChatGPT wasn't reliable for that yet, but still, it did better than he did and he was fully human.
The key word here is "seems".
Use 4, not 3.5. The difference between the two is massive for nuances.
3.5 is the only free version. I won’t pay a subscription for a chatbot.
You can use 4 through Copilot/Bing
Yeah, riddles work better than puns for what I'm talking about since most popular puns were probably in the training dataset.
Like I said, I've had best results (or worst) using cryptic crossword clues, since their solutions are almost definitely not in the training set. So it actually has to "think for itself" and you can see just how stupid it really is when it doesn't have some existing explanation buried somewhere in its training set.