The increasingly human-like way people are engaging with language models Read the full report | Download this report (PDF) | Survey methdology and topline (PDF) March 12, 2025 Half of...
Half of LLM users (49%) think the models they use are smarter than they are, including 26% who think their LLMs are “a lot smarter.” Another 18% think LLMs are as smart as they are. Here are some of the other attributes they see:
Confident: 57% say the main LLM they use seems to act in a confident way.
Reasoning: 39% say the main LLM they use shows the capacity to think and reason at least some of the time.
Sense of humor: 32% say their main LLM seems to have a sense of humor.
Morals: 25% say their main model acts like it makes moral judgments about right and wrong at least sometimes.
Sarcasm: 17% say their prime LLM seems to respond sarcastically.
Sad: 11% say the main model they use seems to express sadness, while 24% say that model also expresses hope.
Specifically it is about 75% of the population being functionally or clinically illiterate as I said. This is more likely caused by the fact that American culture is anti intellectual, and not the lack of being taught etymology, as etymology has little to do with literacy.
There is an etymology word joke that says something along the lines of, "if "pro" is the opposite of "con", then is the opposite of "congress" "progress"?"
And if you don't know etymology, then that seems to make sense.
When you break down the word Congress, you get the prefix con and the root word gress, con means with, and gress means step, so it means to step with or to walk with.
The opposite of walking with someone is to walk apart from someone, so, the actual opposite of congress would be digress, and the opposite of progress would be regress.
Etymology is great at ruining jokes, but it's also great at helping you understand what words mean and why they mean them.
con is with, di apart, both in the "is apart" and "drifts apart" way, also "between" and "not", and trans is, well, also apart, but implying some sense of border, not just (conceptual) distance. I'd say that digress and transgress are comparatively synonym (if you squint in just the right way) and both antonym to congress.
intragress might be an alternative to the missing cisgress, especially as ingress already exists. And then we could have extragress for being not on the inside but not beyond the pale, either.
According to the Programme for the International Assessment of Adult Competencies, 2013, the median score for the US was "level 2". 3.9% scored below level 1, and 4.2% were "non-starters", unable to complete the questionnaire.
Level 2: (226 points) can integrate two or more pieces of information based on criteria, compare and contrast or reason about information and make low-level inferences
Level 3: (276 points) can understand and respond appropriately to dense or lengthy texts, including continuous, non-continuous, mixed, or multiple pages.