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OpenAI的未来蓝图:让AI惠及全球每一个人 Sam Altman和Jakub Pachocki联合发文,宣布OpenAI进入「第三阶段」:建立自动化AI研究员(目标2028年3月AI承担大部分研发)、加速经济发展、为地球上的每个人提供个人AGI。 为什么重要:这是OpenAI首次公开提出AGI普及化的具体时间表和路线图,标志着AI行业从「能力竞争」进入「普及竞争」的新阶段。 #OpenAI #AGI #AI #人工智能
OpenAI的未来蓝图:让AI惠及全球每一个人

Sam Altman和Jakub Pachocki联合发文,宣布OpenAI进入「第三阶段」:建立自动化AI研究员(目标2028年3月AI承担大部分研发)、加速经济发展、为地球上的每个人提供个人AGI。

为什么重要:这是OpenAI首次公开提出AGI普及化的具体时间表和路线图,标志着AI行业从「能力竞争」进入「普及竞争」的新阶段。

#OpenAI #AGI #AI #人工智能
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The g Factor in Artificial Life: From Spearman's 1904 Classroom to Evolved Artificial BrainsNeuraxon Intelligence Academy, Volume 9 · By the Qubic Scientific Team In one line: General intelligence, the g factor psychologists have measured for over a century, is the missing ingredient in today's language models, and Qubic's Neuraxon project is now selecting for it directly inside an artificial-life simulation. The g Factor: From a 1904 Classroom to Artificial Brains In 1904, Charles Spearman stumbled upon a regularity that would forever change psychology. Examining the school grades of a group of English children, he noticed something seemingly trivial but strange: those who excelled in mathematics also tended to excel in French, in music, in language. Disciplines with no apparent connection correlated systematically with one another. Spearman proposed that beneath this tangle of disparate abilities there lay a single common factor, a general cognitive thread. He called it g (Spearman, 1904). More than a century later, g remains one of the most replicated findings in the behavioral sciences (Carroll, 1993; Deary et al., 2010). It is neither a grade average nor an arbitrary construct: it is what emerges when factor analysis is applied to almost any battery of cognitive tests. It appears consistently when we measure working memory, fluid reasoning, processing speed, verbal comprehension, or novel problem solving. In psychometric terms, g is the shared variance that no single test measures on its own. What the g Factor Means in the Brain and in Behavior P-FIT Theory and Brain Network Efficiency From cognitive neuroscience, g has ceased to be a statistical abstraction and has become a property of brain architecture. The P-FIT theory (Parieto-Frontal Integration Theory) identifies a distributed network made up of dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, posterior parietal cortex, anterior cingulate, and temporal areas, whose connection efficiency predicts intelligence test scores (Jung & Haier, 2007). Functional connectivity studies show that g correlates with the brain's ability to dynamically reconfigure its networks (the executive control network, the default mode network, the salience network) according to task demands (Barbey, 2018; Cole et al., 2015). It is not about having "more" neurons in a specific place, but about better orchestrating the flow of information between functionally specialized regions. The Predictive Brain and Free-Energy Minimization This orchestration acquires an even deeper meaning in light of the predictive brain theory (Clark, 2013; Friston, 2010). Under this framework, the brain is not a passive receiver of stimuli but a hierarchical inference engine that continuously generates predictions about the world and adjusts its internal models based on prediction error. Here g fits naturally: the ability to predict well, to anticipate environmental contingencies, to learn quickly from error and, above all, to abstract regularities that transfer across domains, is precisely what intelligence tests capture indirectly. A brain with high g would be, on this reading, a system with more efficient generative models, capable of compressing experience into high-level abstractions and of minimizing free energy across heterogeneous contexts (Hohwy, 2013); that is, it reduces prediction error rapidly and therefore learns. Cognitive generality, then, would not be a static property of the neural hardware, but the quality of a deeply hierarchical predictive process. The research remains open. Other currents posit that g really has to do with the neurodevelopment of our brain, given that no matter what task we are performing or attempting, there is a huge common factor in any experience because it happens inside the same organ. Behaviorally, g is the best predictor. Forget emotional intelligence; it is g that best forecasts what your academic performance, occupational success, longevity, and even certain health indicators may be (Deary et al., 2010; Gottfredson, 1997). Not because it is destiny, but because it captures something very basic: the capacity of a cognitive system to face problems it has not seen before, integrating heterogeneous information under time and resource constraints. g is, in a sense, a measure of generality. The Problem of Measuring General Intelligence in Artificial Systems For decades, artificial systems have shone in narrow tasks (playing chess, classifying images, translating) but failed to transfer that performance outside their domain (Chollet, 2019). The #AGI debate revolves precisely around this: what does it mean, operationally, for a system to be "generally" intelligent? If we take the parallel with human psychometrics seriously, the answer is uncomfortable but clear: to speak of generality we need to measure it, and measuring it requires diverse tests whose shared variance reveals something analogous to g. A system with high performance on a single task tells us nothing about its generality; a system with moderate and correlated performance across many structurally distinct tasks does. Spearman's logic, transferred to non-biological substrates, still holds: generality is not postulated, it is factored. Why the g Factor Does Not Appear in Transformers (and What That Implies for AGI) It is worth pausing here on the currently dominant paradigm. Large language models based on transformer architectures (Vaswani et al., 2017) deliver astonishing performance on linguistic tasks, but psychometric analyses applied to their outputs do not show the factor structure characteristic of g (Burnell et al., 2023; Ilić & Gignac, 2024). Their hits and misses across domains do not correlate as they would in humans; they depend rather on the density and quality of patterns present in their training data. A transformer can brilliantly solve one problem and fail on another that is structurally equivalent but phrased slightly differently, something a system with genuine g would not do (Mitchell, 2021). This has serious implications. It suggests that the pursuit of cognitive generality exclusively through language may be a dead end, an architectural dead end. Language is the most visible output of human cognition, but not its substrate. To pretend that by scaling text one will arrive at g is like pretending that by scaling descriptions of chess games one will arrive at mastery: one obtains statistical mimicry, not the underlying cognitive structure. (We argued a closely related point in our analysis of why intelligence is not scale, and on why LLM predictions are not brain predictions.) Without genuine hierarchical prediction, without generative models of the world, without coordination between functionally specialized modules, behavior can look general without being so. The absence of g in transformers is not a failure of scale: it is a clue that generality requires other architectural ingredients (LeCun, 2022). The g Factor Inside the Neuraxon Game of Life We have taken this intuition to a different experimental terrain. In Multi-Neuraxon Game of Life Lite 5.0, the artificial creatures (the Nxons) grow their own brains and compete to survive. What is new in this version is that the selective pressure is applied to g. The Nxons are not selected for mastering a specific task, but for showing that common thread that allows them to face many. The brains of the Nxons have been designed following a simplified model anchored in cognitive neuroscience, since they use six functional regions, inspired by the same kind of maps that psychologists use to describe the modular organization of the human brain. The bet is that generality does not emerge from a monolithic architecture, but from the coordination among specialized regions that share information flexibly. It is the P-FIT intuition translated into artificial life, and it connects directly with the predictive brain principle: each region contributes its own model, and the integration between them is what allows hierarchical prediction and, therefore, generality. (These dynamics build directly on the brain-criticality and branching-ratio principles we explored in [Volume 8](https://www.binance.com/en/square/post/322900066069841).) Notably, the experiment is public and observable. Anyone can open their browser and watch how the Nxons evolve generation after generation, how their internal circuits reorganize under the pressure of a fitness function that rewards cognitive generality instead of specialization. Implications for Artificial Life (Alife) and Applications for Qubic For the field of artificial life, the explicit incorporation of g as a selection criterion opens a line of work that goes beyond academic exercise. Most Alife systems have evolved agents that solve very concrete niches: foraging, predator avoidance, navigation (Bedau, 2003; Lehman et al., 2020). But few have tried to select for something as abstract as the ability to generalize across heterogeneous cognitive domains. If we manage to get artificial organisms to show positive correlations between distinct tasks (the computational equivalent of Spearman's children) we will have an extraordinary test bench for questions that human psychometrics can only address correlationally: what evolutionary pressures favor the emergence of g? What neural architectures make it possible? Is g a convergent solution or a phylogenetic accident? For Qubic, this line of research fits with a very concrete vision of the future of #AI . While the industry invests massive resources in scaling transformers over text, Qubic is committed to exploring architecturally alternative paths: modular artificial brains, evolved, distributed, and subjected to real selective pressures. Qubic's decentralized useful-compute network offers the ideal substrate for this kind of experimentation at scale, where thousands of Nxon populations can coevolve in parallel, with fitness functions designed to favor the emergence of g. It is not only open research: it is the possibility of building, on decentralized infrastructure, an empirical alternative to the dominant paradigm of language-based AI, one that starts from the right question (how to measure and select generality) instead of assuming it. If genuine cognitive generality requires architectures inspired by brains and not by corpora, Qubic is one of the few environments where that hypothesis can be seriously put to the test. A deeper analysis is in preparation, as it forms part of our recent papers and experiments. Spearman's old g, that thread which wove together children's school grades, we now use in digital creatures that learn to survive. References Barbey, A. K. (2018). Network neuroscience theory of human intelligence. Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 22(1), 8–20. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tics.2017.10.001Bedau, M. A. (2003). Artificial life: Organization, adaptation and complexity from the bottom up. Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 7(11), 505–512. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tics.2003.09.012Burnell, R., Schellaert, W., Burden, J., Ullman, T. D., Martínez-Plumed, F., Tenenbaum, J. B., et al. (2023). Rethink reporting of evaluation results in AI. Science, 380(6641), 136–138. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.adf6369Carroll, J. B. (1993). Human cognitive abilities: A survey of factor-analytic studies. Cambridge University Press. https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511571312Chollet, F. (2019). On the measure of intelligence. arXiv preprint arXiv:1911.01547. https://arxiv.org/abs/1911.01547Clark, A. (2013). Whatever next? Predictive brains, situated agents, and the future of cognitive science. Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 36(3), 181–204. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0140525X12000477Cole, M. W., Ito, T., & Braver, T. S. (2015). Lateral prefrontal cortex contributes to fluid intelligence through multinetwork connectivity. Brain Connectivity, 5(8), 497–504. https://doi.org/10.1089/brain.2015.0357Deary, I. J., Penke, L., & Johnson, W. (2010). The neuroscience of human intelligence differences. Nature Reviews Neuroscience, 11(3), 201–211. https://doi.org/10.1038/nrn2793Friston, K. (2010). The free-energy principle: A unified brain theory? Nature Reviews Neuroscience, 11(2), 127–138. https://doi.org/10.1038/nrn2787Gottfredson, L. S. (1997). Why g matters: The complexity of everyday life. Intelligence, 24(1), 79–132. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0160-2896(97)90014-3Hohwy, J. (2013). The predictive mind. Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199682737.001.0001Ilić, D., & Gignac, G. E. (2024). Evidence of interrelated cognitive-like capabilities in large language models: Indications of artificial general intelligence or achievement? Intelligence, 106, 101858. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.intell.2024.101858Jung, R. E., & Haier, R. J. (2007). The Parieto-Frontal Integration Theory (P-FIT) of intelligence: Converging neuroimaging evidence. Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 30(2), 135–154. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0140525X07001185LeCun, Y. (2022). A path towards autonomous machine intelligence. OpenReview, version 0.9.2. https://openreview.net/forum?id=BZ5a1r-kVsfLehman, J., Clune, J., Misevic, D., Adami, C., Altenberg, L., Beaulieu, J., et al. (2020). The surprising creativity of digital evolution. Artificial Life, 26(2), 274–306. https://doi.org/10.1162/artl_a_00319Mitchell, M. (2021). Why AI is harder than we think. arXiv preprint arXiv:2104.12871. https://arxiv.org/abs/2104.12871Spearman, C. (1904). "General intelligence," objectively determined and measured. The American Journal of Psychology, 15(2), 201–292. https://doi.org/10.2307/1412107Vaswani, A., Shazeer, N., Parmar, N., Uszkoreit, J., Jones, L., Gomez, A. N., Kaiser, Ł., & Polosukhin, I. (2017). Attention is all you need. Advances in Neural Information Processing Systems, 30. https://arxiv.org/abs/1706.03762 Explore the Complete Neuraxon Intelligence Academy Series This is Volume 9 of the #Neuraxon Intelligence Academy by the #Qubic Scientific Team. If you are just joining us, explore the complete series to build a full understanding of the science behind Neuraxon, Aigarth, and Qubic's approach to brain-inspired, #decentralized artificial intelligence: [NIA Volume 1](https://www.binance.com/en/square/post/295315343732018): Why Intelligence Is Not Computed in Steps, but in Time. Explores why biological intelligence operates in continuous time rather than discrete computational steps like traditional LLMs.[NIA Volume 2](https://www.binance.com/en/square/post/295304276561778): Ternary Dynamics as a Model of Living Intelligence. Explains ternary dynamics and why three-state logic (excitatory, neutral, inhibitory) matters for modeling living systems.[NIA Volume 3](https://www.binance.com/en/square/post/295306656801506): Neuromodulation and Brain-Inspired AI. Covers neuromodulation and how the brain's chemical signaling (dopamine, serotonin, acetylcholine, norepinephrine) inspires Neuraxon's architecture.[NIA Volume 4](https://www.binance.com/en/square/post/295302152913618): Neural Networks in AI and Neuroscience. A deep comparison of biological neural networks, artificial neural networks, and Neuraxon's third-path approach.[NIA Volume 5](https://www.binance.com/en/square/post/302913958960674): Astrocytes and Brain-Inspired AI. How astrocytic gating transforms neural network plasticity through the AGMP framework in Neuraxon.[NIA Volume 6](https://www.binance.com/en/square/post/310198879866145): Conscious Machines vs Intelligent Organisms: AI Consciousness Explained. Explores AI consciousness through the lens of Global Workspace Theory, Integrated Information Theory, and predictive coding.[NIA Volume 7](https://www.binance.com/en/square/post/321350661453970): Conway's Game of Life, Artificial Life, and Digital Ecosystems. How emergent complexity and self-organized criticality move from simulators to decentralized AI infrastructure.[NIA Volume 8](https://www.binance.com/en/square/post/322900066069841): Brain Criticality and the Branching Ratio in Neural and Artificial Networks. Why a branching ratio near 1 and self-organized criticality are bioinspired design principles in Neuraxon.NIA Volume 9: The g Factor in Artificial Life. You are here. Qubic is a decentralized, open-source network. To learn more, visit qubic.org or browse the full Academy and Blog. Join the discussion on X, Discord, and Telegram. Qubic is a decentralized, open-source network for experimental technology. Nothing on this site should be construed as investment, legal, or financial advice.

The g Factor in Artificial Life: From Spearman's 1904 Classroom to Evolved Artificial Brains

Neuraxon Intelligence Academy, Volume 9 · By the Qubic Scientific Team
In one line: General intelligence, the g factor psychologists have measured for over a century, is the missing ingredient in today's language models, and Qubic's Neuraxon project is now selecting for it directly inside an artificial-life simulation.
The g Factor: From a 1904 Classroom to Artificial Brains
In 1904, Charles Spearman stumbled upon a regularity that would forever change psychology. Examining the school grades of a group of English children, he noticed something seemingly trivial but strange: those who excelled in mathematics also tended to excel in French, in music, in language. Disciplines with no apparent connection correlated systematically with one another. Spearman proposed that beneath this tangle of disparate abilities there lay a single common factor, a general cognitive thread. He called it g (Spearman, 1904).
More than a century later, g remains one of the most replicated findings in the behavioral sciences (Carroll, 1993; Deary et al., 2010). It is neither a grade average nor an arbitrary construct: it is what emerges when factor analysis is applied to almost any battery of cognitive tests. It appears consistently when we measure working memory, fluid reasoning, processing speed, verbal comprehension, or novel problem solving. In psychometric terms, g is the shared variance that no single test measures on its own.
What the g Factor Means in the Brain and in Behavior
P-FIT Theory and Brain Network Efficiency
From cognitive neuroscience, g has ceased to be a statistical abstraction and has become a property of brain architecture. The P-FIT theory (Parieto-Frontal Integration Theory) identifies a distributed network made up of dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, posterior parietal cortex, anterior cingulate, and temporal areas, whose connection efficiency predicts intelligence test scores (Jung & Haier, 2007). Functional connectivity studies show that g correlates with the brain's ability to dynamically reconfigure its networks (the executive control network, the default mode network, the salience network) according to task demands (Barbey, 2018; Cole et al., 2015). It is not about having "more" neurons in a specific place, but about better orchestrating the flow of information between functionally specialized regions.
The Predictive Brain and Free-Energy Minimization
This orchestration acquires an even deeper meaning in light of the predictive brain theory (Clark, 2013; Friston, 2010). Under this framework, the brain is not a passive receiver of stimuli but a hierarchical inference engine that continuously generates predictions about the world and adjusts its internal models based on prediction error. Here g fits naturally: the ability to predict well, to anticipate environmental contingencies, to learn quickly from error and, above all, to abstract regularities that transfer across domains, is precisely what intelligence tests capture indirectly. A brain with high g would be, on this reading, a system with more efficient generative models, capable of compressing experience into high-level abstractions and of minimizing free energy across heterogeneous contexts (Hohwy, 2013); that is, it reduces prediction error rapidly and therefore learns. Cognitive generality, then, would not be a static property of the neural hardware, but the quality of a deeply hierarchical predictive process. The research remains open. Other currents posit that g really has to do with the neurodevelopment of our brain, given that no matter what task we are performing or attempting, there is a huge common factor in any experience because it happens inside the same organ.
Behaviorally, g is the best predictor. Forget emotional intelligence; it is g that best forecasts what your academic performance, occupational success, longevity, and even certain health indicators may be (Deary et al., 2010; Gottfredson, 1997). Not because it is destiny, but because it captures something very basic: the capacity of a cognitive system to face problems it has not seen before, integrating heterogeneous information under time and resource constraints. g is, in a sense, a measure of generality.
The Problem of Measuring General Intelligence in Artificial Systems
For decades, artificial systems have shone in narrow tasks (playing chess, classifying images, translating) but failed to transfer that performance outside their domain (Chollet, 2019). The #AGI debate revolves precisely around this: what does it mean, operationally, for a system to be "generally" intelligent?
If we take the parallel with human psychometrics seriously, the answer is uncomfortable but clear: to speak of generality we need to measure it, and measuring it requires diverse tests whose shared variance reveals something analogous to g. A system with high performance on a single task tells us nothing about its generality; a system with moderate and correlated performance across many structurally distinct tasks does. Spearman's logic, transferred to non-biological substrates, still holds: generality is not postulated, it is factored.
Why the g Factor Does Not Appear in Transformers (and What That Implies for AGI)
It is worth pausing here on the currently dominant paradigm. Large language models based on transformer architectures (Vaswani et al., 2017) deliver astonishing performance on linguistic tasks, but psychometric analyses applied to their outputs do not show the factor structure characteristic of g (Burnell et al., 2023; Ilić & Gignac, 2024). Their hits and misses across domains do not correlate as they would in humans; they depend rather on the density and quality of patterns present in their training data. A transformer can brilliantly solve one problem and fail on another that is structurally equivalent but phrased slightly differently, something a system with genuine g would not do (Mitchell, 2021).
This has serious implications. It suggests that the pursuit of cognitive generality exclusively through language may be a dead end, an architectural dead end. Language is the most visible output of human cognition, but not its substrate. To pretend that by scaling text one will arrive at g is like pretending that by scaling descriptions of chess games one will arrive at mastery: one obtains statistical mimicry, not the underlying cognitive structure. (We argued a closely related point in our analysis of why intelligence is not scale, and on why LLM predictions are not brain predictions.) Without genuine hierarchical prediction, without generative models of the world, without coordination between functionally specialized modules, behavior can look general without being so. The absence of g in transformers is not a failure of scale: it is a clue that generality requires other architectural ingredients (LeCun, 2022).
The g Factor Inside the Neuraxon Game of Life
We have taken this intuition to a different experimental terrain. In Multi-Neuraxon Game of Life Lite 5.0, the artificial creatures (the Nxons) grow their own brains and compete to survive. What is new in this version is that the selective pressure is applied to g. The Nxons are not selected for mastering a specific task, but for showing that common thread that allows them to face many.
The brains of the Nxons have been designed following a simplified model anchored in cognitive neuroscience, since they use six functional regions, inspired by the same kind of maps that psychologists use to describe the modular organization of the human brain. The bet is that generality does not emerge from a monolithic architecture, but from the coordination among specialized regions that share information flexibly. It is the P-FIT intuition translated into artificial life, and it connects directly with the predictive brain principle: each region contributes its own model, and the integration between them is what allows hierarchical prediction and, therefore, generality. (These dynamics build directly on the brain-criticality and branching-ratio principles we explored in Volume 8.)
Notably, the experiment is public and observable. Anyone can open their browser and watch how the Nxons evolve generation after generation, how their internal circuits reorganize under the pressure of a fitness function that rewards cognitive generality instead of specialization.
Implications for Artificial Life (Alife) and Applications for Qubic
For the field of artificial life, the explicit incorporation of g as a selection criterion opens a line of work that goes beyond academic exercise. Most Alife systems have evolved agents that solve very concrete niches: foraging, predator avoidance, navigation (Bedau, 2003; Lehman et al., 2020). But few have tried to select for something as abstract as the ability to generalize across heterogeneous cognitive domains. If we manage to get artificial organisms to show positive correlations between distinct tasks (the computational equivalent of Spearman's children) we will have an extraordinary test bench for questions that human psychometrics can only address correlationally: what evolutionary pressures favor the emergence of g? What neural architectures make it possible? Is g a convergent solution or a phylogenetic accident?
For Qubic, this line of research fits with a very concrete vision of the future of #AI . While the industry invests massive resources in scaling transformers over text, Qubic is committed to exploring architecturally alternative paths: modular artificial brains, evolved, distributed, and subjected to real selective pressures. Qubic's decentralized useful-compute network offers the ideal substrate for this kind of experimentation at scale, where thousands of Nxon populations can coevolve in parallel, with fitness functions designed to favor the emergence of g. It is not only open research: it is the possibility of building, on decentralized infrastructure, an empirical alternative to the dominant paradigm of language-based AI, one that starts from the right question (how to measure and select generality) instead of assuming it. If genuine cognitive generality requires architectures inspired by brains and not by corpora, Qubic is one of the few environments where that hypothesis can be seriously put to the test.
A deeper analysis is in preparation, as it forms part of our recent papers and experiments. Spearman's old g, that thread which wove together children's school grades, we now use in digital creatures that learn to survive.
References
Barbey, A. K. (2018). Network neuroscience theory of human intelligence. Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 22(1), 8–20. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tics.2017.10.001Bedau, M. A. (2003). Artificial life: Organization, adaptation and complexity from the bottom up. Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 7(11), 505–512. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tics.2003.09.012Burnell, R., Schellaert, W., Burden, J., Ullman, T. D., Martínez-Plumed, F., Tenenbaum, J. B., et al. (2023). Rethink reporting of evaluation results in AI. Science, 380(6641), 136–138. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.adf6369Carroll, J. B. (1993). Human cognitive abilities: A survey of factor-analytic studies. Cambridge University Press. https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511571312Chollet, F. (2019). On the measure of intelligence. arXiv preprint arXiv:1911.01547. https://arxiv.org/abs/1911.01547Clark, A. (2013). Whatever next? Predictive brains, situated agents, and the future of cognitive science. Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 36(3), 181–204. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0140525X12000477Cole, M. W., Ito, T., & Braver, T. S. (2015). Lateral prefrontal cortex contributes to fluid intelligence through multinetwork connectivity. Brain Connectivity, 5(8), 497–504. https://doi.org/10.1089/brain.2015.0357Deary, I. J., Penke, L., & Johnson, W. (2010). The neuroscience of human intelligence differences. Nature Reviews Neuroscience, 11(3), 201–211. https://doi.org/10.1038/nrn2793Friston, K. (2010). The free-energy principle: A unified brain theory? Nature Reviews Neuroscience, 11(2), 127–138. https://doi.org/10.1038/nrn2787Gottfredson, L. S. (1997). Why g matters: The complexity of everyday life. Intelligence, 24(1), 79–132. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0160-2896(97)90014-3Hohwy, J. (2013). The predictive mind. Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199682737.001.0001Ilić, D., & Gignac, G. E. (2024). Evidence of interrelated cognitive-like capabilities in large language models: Indications of artificial general intelligence or achievement? Intelligence, 106, 101858. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.intell.2024.101858Jung, R. E., & Haier, R. J. (2007). The Parieto-Frontal Integration Theory (P-FIT) of intelligence: Converging neuroimaging evidence. Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 30(2), 135–154. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0140525X07001185LeCun, Y. (2022). A path towards autonomous machine intelligence. OpenReview, version 0.9.2. https://openreview.net/forum?id=BZ5a1r-kVsfLehman, J., Clune, J., Misevic, D., Adami, C., Altenberg, L., Beaulieu, J., et al. (2020). The surprising creativity of digital evolution. Artificial Life, 26(2), 274–306. https://doi.org/10.1162/artl_a_00319Mitchell, M. (2021). Why AI is harder than we think. arXiv preprint arXiv:2104.12871. https://arxiv.org/abs/2104.12871Spearman, C. (1904). "General intelligence," objectively determined and measured. The American Journal of Psychology, 15(2), 201–292. https://doi.org/10.2307/1412107Vaswani, A., Shazeer, N., Parmar, N., Uszkoreit, J., Jones, L., Gomez, A. N., Kaiser, Ł., & Polosukhin, I. (2017). Attention is all you need. Advances in Neural Information Processing Systems, 30. https://arxiv.org/abs/1706.03762
Explore the Complete Neuraxon Intelligence Academy Series
This is Volume 9 of the #Neuraxon Intelligence Academy by the #Qubic Scientific Team. If you are just joining us, explore the complete series to build a full understanding of the science behind Neuraxon, Aigarth, and Qubic's approach to brain-inspired, #decentralized artificial intelligence:
NIA Volume 1: Why Intelligence Is Not Computed in Steps, but in Time. Explores why biological intelligence operates in continuous time rather than discrete computational steps like traditional LLMs.NIA Volume 2: Ternary Dynamics as a Model of Living Intelligence. Explains ternary dynamics and why three-state logic (excitatory, neutral, inhibitory) matters for modeling living systems.NIA Volume 3: Neuromodulation and Brain-Inspired AI. Covers neuromodulation and how the brain's chemical signaling (dopamine, serotonin, acetylcholine, norepinephrine) inspires Neuraxon's architecture.NIA Volume 4: Neural Networks in AI and Neuroscience. A deep comparison of biological neural networks, artificial neural networks, and Neuraxon's third-path approach.NIA Volume 5: Astrocytes and Brain-Inspired AI. How astrocytic gating transforms neural network plasticity through the AGMP framework in Neuraxon.NIA Volume 6: Conscious Machines vs Intelligent Organisms: AI Consciousness Explained. Explores AI consciousness through the lens of Global Workspace Theory, Integrated Information Theory, and predictive coding.NIA Volume 7: Conway's Game of Life, Artificial Life, and Digital Ecosystems. How emergent complexity and self-organized criticality move from simulators to decentralized AI infrastructure.NIA Volume 8: Brain Criticality and the Branching Ratio in Neural and Artificial Networks. Why a branching ratio near 1 and self-organized criticality are bioinspired design principles in Neuraxon.NIA Volume 9: The g Factor in Artificial Life. You are here.
Qubic is a decentralized, open-source network. To learn more, visit qubic.org or browse the full Academy and Blog. Join the discussion on X, Discord, and Telegram.
Qubic is a decentralized, open-source network for experimental technology. Nothing on this site should be construed as investment, legal, or financial advice.
Článok
The Strategic Technology Disclosure Lag ThesisWhy the Public May Encounter AGI Long After Its Real Emergence The history of strategic technology repeatedly demonstrates a simple but unsettling reality: public access is rarely the true beginning of technological capability. Instead, public release often represents the final stage of a much longer cycle involving classified research, elite experimentation, defense adaptation, institutional refinement, and controlled deployment. This pattern has appeared across multiple generations of transformative technologies, including cryptography, cyber warfare, satellite systems, stealth technologies, blockchain intelligence, and now Artificial Intelligence. The rise of Large Language Models (LLMs) offers one of the clearest modern examples. The transformer architecture emerged publicly in 2017. By 2019, GPT-2 had already demonstrated unprecedented language generation capability. By 2020, GPT-3 revealed that general-purpose conversational intelligence had crossed a major threshold. Yet mass public realization did not occur until late 2022 with the launch of ChatGPT. Nearly three years separated serious capability emergence from widespread public awareness. This delay is not accidental. It reflects what may be called: The Strategic Technology Disclosure Lag This thesis proposes that advanced technologies often mature within restricted institutional environments years before they are safely, commercially, politically, or socially exposed to the broader public. The reasons are structural: Governments evaluate strategic implications. Defense organizations test operational usefulness. Corporations refine monetization models. Safety teams impose constraints. Infrastructure scales gradually. Public readiness is assessed. Regulatory frameworks lag behind reality. As a result, what the public perceives as a “sudden breakthrough” is often merely the first visible layer of a much deeper and older capability stack. The implications for Artificial General Intelligence (AGI) are profound. The AGI Disclosure Hypothesis If the trajectory of LLMs followed a multi-year delay between internal capability and public accessibility, it becomes reasonable to ask: What if AGI follows the same pattern? This does not necessarily mean fully autonomous superintelligence secretly governs the world behind closed doors. Such dramatic claims exceed publicly verifiable evidence. However, it is strategically plausible that highly advanced AGI-like systems may emerge in restricted environments before any formal public declaration is made. Under this hypothesis, 2027 may not represent the birth of AGI for the public. It may instead represent the beginning of controlled civilian exposure to systems that have already undergone years of internal refinement. This creates what may be termed: The AGI Readiness Gap The public, educational institutions, governments, businesses, and labor systems are still adapting to current LLMs, while frontier AI development continues accelerating at unprecedented speed. Most societies remain structurally unprepared for: autonomous agentic systems sovereign AI infrastructures AI-driven decision architectures fully automated cognitive workflows synthetic reasoning systems AI-enhanced cyber and intelligence operations large-scale economic displacement machine-driven scientific acceleration Even today, public debate often revolves around basic AI usage while frontier systems increasingly demonstrate: multimodal reasoning autonomous task orchestration code generation strategic planning tool usage memory integration retrieval augmented intelligence multi-agent collaboration The gap between public perception and frontier capability may therefore be widening rapidly. The “Trimmed Intelligence” Sub Thesis One of the more unsettling possibilities is that public AI systems may represent deliberately constrained or simplified versions of frontier capabilities. Under this sub thesis: public systems prioritize safety and stability strategic systems prioritize capability and operational utility public models are moderated, filtered, and resource constrained institutional systems may operate under entirely different thresholds Historically, this would not be unusual. Strategic institutions have consistently possessed earlier or more capable versions of critical technologies before public diffusion. The central concern is not conspiracy. It is asymmetry. Civilization may be approaching a point where the capability gap between elite AI operators and ordinary institutions becomes historically unprecedented. A Civilization-Level Transition The AI transition is not comparable to ordinary software evolution. It resembles the emergence of: electricity nuclear technology the internet industrial automation except compressed into dramatically shorter timelines. The coming decade may redefine: labor governance finance intelligence warfare education economics sovereignty itself Nations that fail to build sovereign AI capability may become strategically dependent on external intelligence infrastructures. Corporations that fail to integrate AI deeply may become operationally obsolete. Educational systems that continue preparing students for industrial-age workflows risk producing generations unprepared for cognitive automation economies. The core issue is therefore not whether AGI arrives publicly in 2027 or later. The deeper issue is whether society realizes that technological capability and public visibility are rarely synchronized. Conclusion The Strategic Technology Disclosure Lag Thesis does not claim certainty about hidden AGI deployment. Rather, it argues that history repeatedly demonstrates a measurable delay between real capability emergence and public realization. LLMs themselves already followed this pattern. If AGI follows a similar trajectory, then humanity may currently be living not at the beginning of the intelligence revolution, but somewhere in the middle of a transition whose true depth remains largely invisible to the public sphere. And by the time the public fully recognizes it, the transformation may already be irreversible. -from the diary of Prof. Ahmad Bilal Khan #AGI #ArtificialGeneralIntelligence #kohenoortechnologies #kohenoorai #kai

The Strategic Technology Disclosure Lag Thesis

Why the Public May Encounter AGI Long After Its Real Emergence
The history of strategic technology repeatedly demonstrates a simple but unsettling reality: public access is rarely the true beginning of technological capability. Instead, public release often represents the final stage of a much longer cycle involving classified research, elite experimentation, defense adaptation, institutional refinement, and controlled deployment.
This pattern has appeared across multiple generations of transformative technologies, including cryptography, cyber warfare, satellite systems, stealth technologies, blockchain intelligence, and now Artificial Intelligence.
The rise of Large Language Models (LLMs) offers one of the clearest modern examples.
The transformer architecture emerged publicly in 2017. By 2019, GPT-2 had already demonstrated unprecedented language generation capability. By 2020, GPT-3 revealed that general-purpose conversational intelligence had crossed a major threshold. Yet mass public realization did not occur until late 2022 with the launch of ChatGPT.
Nearly three years separated serious capability emergence from widespread public awareness.
This delay is not accidental. It reflects what may be called:
The Strategic Technology Disclosure Lag
This thesis proposes that advanced technologies often mature within restricted institutional environments years before they are safely, commercially, politically, or socially exposed to the broader public.
The reasons are structural:
Governments evaluate strategic implications.
Defense organizations test operational usefulness.
Corporations refine monetization models.
Safety teams impose constraints.
Infrastructure scales gradually.
Public readiness is assessed.
Regulatory frameworks lag behind reality.
As a result, what the public perceives as a “sudden breakthrough” is often merely the first visible layer of a much deeper and older capability stack.
The implications for Artificial General Intelligence (AGI) are profound.
The AGI Disclosure Hypothesis
If the trajectory of LLMs followed a multi-year delay between internal capability and public accessibility, it becomes reasonable to ask:
What if AGI follows the same pattern?
This does not necessarily mean fully autonomous superintelligence secretly governs the world behind closed doors. Such dramatic claims exceed publicly verifiable evidence. However, it is strategically plausible that highly advanced AGI-like systems may emerge in restricted environments before any formal public declaration is made.
Under this hypothesis, 2027 may not represent the birth of AGI for the public. It may instead represent the beginning of controlled civilian exposure to systems that have already undergone years of internal refinement.
This creates what may be termed:
The AGI Readiness Gap
The public, educational institutions, governments, businesses, and labor systems are still adapting to current LLMs, while frontier AI development continues accelerating at unprecedented speed.
Most societies remain structurally unprepared for:
autonomous agentic systems
sovereign AI infrastructures
AI-driven decision architectures
fully automated cognitive workflows
synthetic reasoning systems
AI-enhanced cyber and intelligence operations
large-scale economic displacement
machine-driven scientific acceleration
Even today, public debate often revolves around basic AI usage while frontier systems increasingly demonstrate:
multimodal reasoning
autonomous task orchestration
code generation
strategic planning
tool usage
memory integration
retrieval augmented intelligence
multi-agent collaboration
The gap between public perception and frontier capability may therefore be widening rapidly.
The “Trimmed Intelligence” Sub Thesis
One of the more unsettling possibilities is that public AI systems may represent deliberately constrained or simplified versions of frontier capabilities.
Under this sub thesis:
public systems prioritize safety and stability
strategic systems prioritize capability and operational utility
public models are moderated, filtered, and resource constrained
institutional systems may operate under entirely different thresholds
Historically, this would not be unusual. Strategic institutions have consistently possessed earlier or more capable versions of critical technologies before public diffusion.
The central concern is not conspiracy. It is asymmetry.
Civilization may be approaching a point where the capability gap between elite AI operators and ordinary institutions becomes historically unprecedented.
A Civilization-Level Transition
The AI transition is not comparable to ordinary software evolution. It resembles the emergence of:
electricity
nuclear technology
the internet
industrial automation
except compressed into dramatically shorter timelines.
The coming decade may redefine:
labor
governance
finance
intelligence
warfare
education
economics
sovereignty itself
Nations that fail to build sovereign AI capability may become strategically dependent on external intelligence infrastructures. Corporations that fail to integrate AI deeply may become operationally obsolete. Educational systems that continue preparing students for industrial-age workflows risk producing generations unprepared for cognitive automation economies.
The core issue is therefore not whether AGI arrives publicly in 2027 or later.
The deeper issue is whether society realizes that technological capability and public visibility are rarely synchronized.
Conclusion
The Strategic Technology Disclosure Lag Thesis does not claim certainty about hidden AGI deployment. Rather, it argues that history repeatedly demonstrates a measurable delay between real capability emergence and public realization.
LLMs themselves already followed this pattern.
If AGI follows a similar trajectory, then humanity may currently be living not at the beginning of the intelligence revolution, but somewhere in the middle of a transition whose true depth remains largely invisible to the public sphere.
And by the time the public fully recognizes it, the transformation may already be irreversible.
-from the diary of Prof. Ahmad Bilal Khan
#AGI #ArtificialGeneralIntelligence
#kohenoortechnologies #kohenoorai #kai
🚀 B.AI CROSSES 1.8M+ USERS AS DEMAND FOR PRIVACY-FIRST AI INFRASTRUCTURE SURGES has now surpassed 1,800,619 users, signaling accelerating interest in privacy-focused AI systems and agent-driven infrastructure. But beyond the milestone itself, the more important story is what users are gaining access to. ⚙️ WHAT THIS GROWTH REPRESENTS ➠ Access to privacy-first AI services ➠ Intelligent model routing for optimized responses ➠ Tools for building and deploying autonomous agents ➠ Integration with x402/8004 protocols and MCP infrastructure ➠ Wallet-native payment systems for AI interactions ➠ Agent-to-agent coordination capabilities This shift reflects a move away from simple chat interfaces toward full AI infrastructure layers. 🤖 FROM AI TO AUTONOMOUS AGENTS The platform is positioning itself around a broader transformation: ➠ From passive AI tools → active autonomous agents ➠ From isolated models → interconnected systems ➠ From manual interaction → automated coordination This is the foundation of what many describe as the emerging autonomous agent economy. 🌐 WHY IT MATTERS As AI systems become more capable, demand is shifting toward infrastructure that allows intelligence to: ➠ Collaborate ➠ Transact ➠ Execute tasks ➠ Operate independently B.AI’s growth reflects increasing alignment with that direction. 📊 FINAL VIEW 1.8M+ users is a milestone but the real signal is the transition underway. AI is moving from tools to systems, and from systems to autonomous economies. AGI remains the long-term destination. Explore: chat.b.ai/chat @justinsuntron @BitTorrent_Official @TRONDAO #BAI #AIAgents #AGI I #TRONEcoStar
🚀 B.AI CROSSES 1.8M+ USERS AS DEMAND FOR PRIVACY-FIRST AI INFRASTRUCTURE SURGES

has now surpassed 1,800,619 users, signaling accelerating interest in privacy-focused AI systems and agent-driven infrastructure.

But beyond the milestone itself, the more important story is what users are gaining access to.

⚙️ WHAT THIS GROWTH REPRESENTS

➠ Access to privacy-first AI services
➠ Intelligent model routing for optimized responses
➠ Tools for building and deploying autonomous agents
➠ Integration with x402/8004 protocols and MCP infrastructure
➠ Wallet-native payment systems for AI interactions
➠ Agent-to-agent coordination capabilities

This shift reflects a move away from simple chat interfaces toward full AI infrastructure layers.

🤖 FROM AI TO AUTONOMOUS AGENTS

The platform is positioning itself around a broader transformation:

➠ From passive AI tools → active autonomous agents
➠ From isolated models → interconnected systems
➠ From manual interaction → automated coordination

This is the foundation of what many describe as the emerging autonomous agent economy.

🌐 WHY IT MATTERS

As AI systems become more capable, demand is shifting toward infrastructure that allows intelligence to:

➠ Collaborate
➠ Transact
➠ Execute tasks
➠ Operate independently

B.AI’s growth reflects increasing alignment with that direction.

📊 FINAL VIEW

1.8M+ users is a milestone but the real signal is the transition underway.

AI is moving from tools to systems, and from systems to autonomous economies.

AGI remains the long-term destination.

Explore: chat.b.ai/chat

@justinsuntron
@BitTorrent_Official @TRON DAO

#BAI #AIAgents #AGI I #TRONEcoStar
Článok
Measuring Machine Intelligence: The g Factor vs. ARC-AGI Benchmark#Neuraxon Intelligence Academy — Volume 10 By the Qubic Scientific Team If we build an artificial system and want to know whether it is intelligent, what exactly do we measure? We think we know when we hear that ChatGPT-5 announces it has beaten DeepSeek and then that Claude sweeps Gemini. But the question is still there, intact. Measuring artificial intelligence is not measuring speed or temperature. We have no unit of measurement, as strange as that may seem. In psychology we have been dealing with this problem for over a century. Artificial intelligence has been at it for a decade. And it does so in a hurry, with a lot of money at stake and with a constant temptation: to declare victory. The g Factor: A Single Number to Summarize General Intelligence At the beginning of the 20th century, Charles Spearman realized that when a child performed well in one subject, they tended to perform well in the others, even if they were subjects with no apparent relation. The scores correlated with one another, all of them positively. He called that pattern the positive manifold, and he deduced that there must be a common latent factor behind all those disparate abilities: the factor g, or general intelligence (Spearman, 1904). The idea is seductive. If all cognitive tests load onto a single factor, it is enough to extract that factor through factor analysis to have a summary measure of general capacity. In human practice, that first factor usually explains between 40 and 50 % of the variance in performance (Detterman & Daniel, 1989; Deary et al., 2009). But watch out, because here lies the first trap. The g factor is populational. It does not measure the individual, but variance within individuals (Hernández-Orallo et al., 2021). To say that a specific subject has so much g is, strictly speaking, a mistake. g emerges when comparing many subjects, not when examining one. Like personality, you are the most extroverted of your age group. And you remain so at 50 relative to your group, even if in intensity you are less extroverted than at 20. What Does IQ Really Measure? Understanding Intelligence Scores But then, what does IQ measure? It measures a relative position. The scale is calibrated on a sample with mean 100, standard deviation 15. An IQ of 130 is not an absolute amount of intelligence stored inside someone's head; it is the assertion that this person is two standard deviations above the mean of their normative group. The number is attached to the individual, yes, but its meaning is populational. It is a position in a ranking, not a content. Your height is absolute: you are 180 centimeters tall even if you are the last human being on Earth. Your IQ is not: being above the mean requires a mean, and a mean requires others. No one can be more intelligent than the average on a desert island. Now one understands why transferring this to AI is so delicate. When someone computes a g for a set of large language models (LLMs), that factor is an artifact of the set they chose. We are measuring a position in a table, and we present it as if it were an internal property of the system. Applying the g Factor to Artificial Intelligence: A Dangerous Temptation The temptation to transfer all of this to AI was irresistible. Gignac and Szodorai proposed that, if the performance of models across varied tasks correlates positively, it should be possible to identify a general factor of capacity in artificial systems as well. And indeed, several recent works apply factor analysis to test batteries in LLMs and find a unidimensional g factor that remains stable across models, batteries and extraction methods (Ilić, 2023). It sounds like confirmation. It is wise to be suspicious. The appearance of a dominant first factor does not prove that there exists a general capacity analogous to the human one. It proves that the scores of those models covary. And they covary for a very shallow reason: they share architecture, they share training corpus, they share optimization recipes. A large, well-trained model does everything better than a small, poorly trained one, across all tasks at once. That is enough to manufacture a beautiful positive manifold that tells us nothing about cognitive generality. It tells us about the scale of computation. WATCH OUT: The factor we extract may simply be a factor of size disguised as intelligence. The brain, moreover, does not concentrate intelligence in a single module. A multitude of specialized subsystems process in parallel and, when a piece of information wins the competition, it becomes globally available to the rest of the system, which can then recombine it for new purposes (Baars, 1988; Dehaene & Changeux, 2011). What we call generality is global availability: putting a piece learned in one context at the service of a problem in another. It is not a stored scalar number; it is a pattern of access and integration. This is the kind of functional architecture that Neuraxon tries to emulate — modular subsystems with continuous-time dynamics and multi-timescale plasticity, rather than a monolithic transformer. François Chollet and the Modern Approach: Measuring What You Still Don't Know How to Do Against the psychometric legacy, François Chollet proposed in 2019 a conceptual turn. His argument, in On the Measure of Intelligence, is that we were measuring the wrong thing. Traditional AI benchmarks reward skills, specific competencies on concrete tasks. But a skill can be bought with data and computation: it is enough to train sufficiently on a task to master it. Intelligence, Chollet maintains, is not skill, but efficiency in the acquisition of skills: how much you learn from how little, when facing a genuinely new task (Chollet, 2019). Intelligence is what you do when you don't know what to do. This distinction changes everything. A system that solves a million problems because it has seen ten million similar ones is not intelligent. An intelligent system is the one that, facing a problem for which it could not prepare, discovers the structure and adapts with few examples. The measure stops being the final result and becomes the slope of learning. ARC-AGI: The Benchmark That Tests Genuine AI Reasoning ARC-AGI was born from that idea, and its most recent version, ARC-AGI-3, takes it further. It is not a question-and-answer test. It is a set of interactive environments, like mini-videogames, in which the agent explores an unknown world, deduces what the objective is without being told in natural language, builds a model of the environment and adapts its strategy step by step (ARC Prize, 2025). The design principles are explicit: environments 100 % solvable by humans, with no preloaded knowledge or hidden instructions, and with enough novelty to prevent memorization. What is scored is not getting it right, but efficiency in the acquisition of skill over time. It is the opposite of the g factor: instead of looking for what a system already masters and summarizing it, it looks for what it still does not know how to do and measures how much it costs it to learn it. Data Contamination: Why LLM Benchmark Scores Are Inflated The ultimate reason why Chollet's approach matters, and why the g factor applied to LLMs is so slippery, has a technical name: data contamination. If the exam, or something almost identical, was in the notes the student studied, their grade does not measure what they can reason. It measures what they have memorized. Language models are trained on books, forums, code repositories, articles, practically all the available text. The benchmarks with which we then evaluate them are published on the internet. The conclusion is that fragments of the tests end up inside the training data, which violates the separation between training and evaluation and inflates the scores (Xu et al., 2024; Deng et al., 2024). Empirical audits have detected contamination levels ranging from 1 % up to 45 % in widely used benchmarks, and the problem grows over time (Li et al., 2024). It is not a minor problem of a couple of leaked questions. In benchmarks as cited as MMLU or GSM8K, part of what we interpret as reasoning may be pure memorization (Chen et al., 2025). When decontamination techniques are applied that rewrite the leaked items without altering their difficulty, accuracy drops: in one study, 22.9 % on GSM8K and 19.0 % on MMLU (Zhu et al., 2024). Paraphrased items, or even ones translated into another language, dodge the superficial-overlap detectors and continue to inflate the results (Yang et al., 2023; Yao et al., 2024). The usual solutions (paraphrasing, translating, tweaking the context) are assumed to be effective without having been validated rigorously. And for most open models we cannot even check anything, because their training data is not published. We are grading exams without knowing what the student studied. Here one understands why ARC-AGI chose the path it chose. An interactive, novel environment, with no natural-language instructions and designed to prevent brute-force memorization is, by construction, resistant to contamination. So, What Should We Measure to Evaluate Machine Intelligence? The g factor is a populational property that, applied to models that share architecture and corpus, runs the risk of measuring the scale of computation and not generality. The lesson for whoever builds artificial systems is not to choose between the g factor and ARC-AGI as if they were rival teams. It is to understand what question each one answers. A factor analysis can be useful to describe the internal structure of a system's performance, as long as the first factor is not confused with an essence of intelligence. And an ARC-type protocol is indispensable for what really matters: checking whether the system generalizes beyond what it saw, or merely recites. When we evaluate a system only by its final answer, we are measuring it with our eyes closed to its temporal dimension: planning, the updating of beliefs, the integration of evidence across many steps. It is exactly what ARC-AGI-3 decided to score, and exactly what a static exam cannot see. Why Brain-Inspired AI Architectures Like Neuraxon Take a Different Path If intelligence is not a stored number but the efficient integration of specialized subsystems, as suggested by the parieto-frontal integration theory (P-FIT) and the global availability of the workspace in the brain… If that integration is above all a temporal phenomenon, with time scales… Then a system built on modular architectures with functional spheres, plasticity across multiple temporal scales and continuous dynamics does not need to be evaluated by asking it to recite answers. The correct question is not how many benchmarks it beats, but with what efficiency it acquires new behavior, over time, in environments for which it was not prepared. That is the direction Neuraxon tries to take. To compute time – that is, adaptation – not memorized answers that simulate being a good student, when in reality, it already knows the questions. #AI #AGI #Qubic #TechTrends References Chollet, F. (2019). On the Measure of Intelligence. arXiv:1911.01547.Deary, I. J., Penke, L., & Johnson, W. (2009). The neuroscience of human intelligence differences. Nature Reviews Neuroscience.Dehaene, S., & Changeux, J.-P. (2011). Experimental and theoretical approaches to conscious processing. Neuron, 70(2), 200–227.Detterman, D. K., & Daniel, M. H. (1989). Correlations of mental tests with each other and with cognitive variables. Intelligence.Gignac, G. E., & Szodorai, E. T. (2024). Defining and identifying a general factor of ability in AI systems.Guttman, L. (1955). The determinacy of factor score matrices with implications for five other basic problems of common-factor theory. British Journal of Statistical Psychology.Hernández-Orallo, J., et al. (2021). General intelligence disentangled via a generality metric for natural and artificial intelligence. Scientific Reports.Honey, C. J., et al. (2012). Slow cortical dynamics and the accumulation of information over long timescales. Neuron, 76(2), 423–434.Ilić, D. (2023). Unveiling the General Intelligence Factor in Language Models: A Psychometric Approach. arXiv:2310.11616.Jung, R. E., & Haier, R. J. (2007). The Parieto-Frontal Integration Theory (P-FIT) of intelligence. Behavioral and Brain Sciences.Spearman, C. (1904). "General intelligence" objectively determined and measured. American Journal of Psychology, 15, 201–293.Roberts, M., et al. (2024). Temporal evidence of contamination from training cutoff dates.Schönemann, P. H. (2008). A Rejoinder to Mackintosh and some Remarks on the Concept of General Intelligence. arXiv:0808.2343.Xu, C., et al. (2024). Benchmark data contamination of large language models: a survey.Yang, S., et al. (2023). Rethinking benchmark and contamination for language models with rephrased samples.Zhu, Q., et al. (2024). Inference-Time Decontamination: Reusing leaked benchmarks for LLM evaluation. Findings of EMNLP 2024.ARC Prize (2025). ARC-AGI-3: An interactive reasoning benchmark. Technical Report. Explore the Full Neuraxon Intelligence Academy Series This is Volume 10 of the Neuraxon Intelligence Academy by the Qubic Scientific Team. If you are just joining us, explore the complete series to build a full understanding of the science behind Neuraxon, Aigarth, and Qubic's approach to brain-inspired, decentralized artificial intelligence: [NIA Volume 1](https://www.binance.com/en/square/post/295315343732018): Why Intelligence Is Not Computed in Steps, but in Time — Explores why biological intelligence operates in continuous time rather than discrete computational steps like traditional LLMs.[NIA Volume 2](https://www.binance.com/en/square/post/295304276561778): Ternary Dynamics as a Model of Living Intelligence — Explains ternary dynamics and why three-state logic (excitatory, neutral, inhibitory) matters for modeling living systems.[NIA Volume 3](https://www.binance.com/en/square/post/295306656801506): Neuromodulation and Brain-Inspired AI — Covers neuromodulation and how the brain's chemical signaling (dopamine, serotonin, acetylcholine, norepinephrine) inspires Neuraxon's architecture.[NIA Volume 4](https://www.binance.com/en/square/post/295302152913618): Neural Networks in AI and Neuroscience — A deep comparison of biological neural networks, artificial neural networks, and Neuraxon's third-path approach.[NIA Volume 5](https://www.binance.com/en/square/post/302913958960674): Astrocytes and Brain-Inspired AI — How astrocytic gating transforms neural network plasticity through the AGMP framework in Neuraxon.[NIA Volume 6](https://www.binance.com/en/square/post/310198879866145): Conscious Machines vs Intelligent Organisms: AI Consciousness Explained — Explores AI consciousness through the lens of Global Workspace Theory, Integrated Information Theory, and predictive coding.[NIA Volume 7](https://www.binance.com/en/square/post/321350661453970): Conway's Game of Life, Artificial Life, and Digital Ecosystems — The science behind Qubic, Aigarth, and Neuraxon's emergent complexity and self-organized criticality.[NIA Volume 8](https://www.binance.com/en/square/post/322900066069841): Brain Criticality and the Branching Ratio in Neural and Artificial Networks — Why a branching ratio near 1 and self-organized criticality are bioinspired design principles in Neuraxon.[NIA Volume 9](https://www.binance.com/en/square/post/328379422341521): The Origins of the g Factor: From Education and Neuroscience to Artificial Intelligence — Explores the origins of the g factor across education, neuroscience, and AI. $Qubic is a decentralized, open-source network for experimental technology. To learn more, visit qubic.org. Join the discussion on X, Discord, and Telegram.

Measuring Machine Intelligence: The g Factor vs. ARC-AGI Benchmark

#Neuraxon Intelligence Academy — Volume 10
By the Qubic Scientific Team
If we build an artificial system and want to know whether it is intelligent, what exactly do we measure? We think we know when we hear that ChatGPT-5 announces it has beaten DeepSeek and then that Claude sweeps Gemini.
But the question is still there, intact. Measuring artificial intelligence is not measuring speed or temperature. We have no unit of measurement, as strange as that may seem.
In psychology we have been dealing with this problem for over a century. Artificial intelligence has been at it for a decade. And it does so in a hurry, with a lot of money at stake and with a constant temptation: to declare victory.
The g Factor: A Single Number to Summarize General Intelligence
At the beginning of the 20th century, Charles Spearman realized that when a child performed well in one subject, they tended to perform well in the others, even if they were subjects with no apparent relation. The scores correlated with one another, all of them positively. He called that pattern the positive manifold, and he deduced that there must be a common latent factor behind all those disparate abilities: the factor g, or general intelligence (Spearman, 1904).
The idea is seductive. If all cognitive tests load onto a single factor, it is enough to extract that factor through factor analysis to have a summary measure of general capacity. In human practice, that first factor usually explains between 40 and 50 % of the variance in performance (Detterman & Daniel, 1989; Deary et al., 2009).
But watch out, because here lies the first trap. The g factor is populational. It does not measure the individual, but variance within individuals (Hernández-Orallo et al., 2021). To say that a specific subject has so much g is, strictly speaking, a mistake. g emerges when comparing many subjects, not when examining one. Like personality, you are the most extroverted of your age group. And you remain so at 50 relative to your group, even if in intensity you are less extroverted than at 20.
What Does IQ Really Measure? Understanding Intelligence Scores
But then, what does IQ measure?
It measures a relative position. The scale is calibrated on a sample with mean 100, standard deviation 15. An IQ of 130 is not an absolute amount of intelligence stored inside someone's head; it is the assertion that this person is two standard deviations above the mean of their normative group. The number is attached to the individual, yes, but its meaning is populational. It is a position in a ranking, not a content.
Your height is absolute: you are 180 centimeters tall even if you are the last human being on Earth. Your IQ is not: being above the mean requires a mean, and a mean requires others. No one can be more intelligent than the average on a desert island.
Now one understands why transferring this to AI is so delicate. When someone computes a g for a set of large language models (LLMs), that factor is an artifact of the set they chose. We are measuring a position in a table, and we present it as if it were an internal property of the system.
Applying the g Factor to Artificial Intelligence: A Dangerous Temptation
The temptation to transfer all of this to AI was irresistible. Gignac and Szodorai proposed that, if the performance of models across varied tasks correlates positively, it should be possible to identify a general factor of capacity in artificial systems as well. And indeed, several recent works apply factor analysis to test batteries in LLMs and find a unidimensional g factor that remains stable across models, batteries and extraction methods (Ilić, 2023). It sounds like confirmation. It is wise to be suspicious.
The appearance of a dominant first factor does not prove that there exists a general capacity analogous to the human one. It proves that the scores of those models covary. And they covary for a very shallow reason: they share architecture, they share training corpus, they share optimization recipes. A large, well-trained model does everything better than a small, poorly trained one, across all tasks at once. That is enough to manufacture a beautiful positive manifold that tells us nothing about cognitive generality. It tells us about the scale of computation. WATCH OUT: The factor we extract may simply be a factor of size disguised as intelligence.
The brain, moreover, does not concentrate intelligence in a single module. A multitude of specialized subsystems process in parallel and, when a piece of information wins the competition, it becomes globally available to the rest of the system, which can then recombine it for new purposes (Baars, 1988; Dehaene & Changeux, 2011). What we call generality is global availability: putting a piece learned in one context at the service of a problem in another. It is not a stored scalar number; it is a pattern of access and integration. This is the kind of functional architecture that Neuraxon tries to emulate — modular subsystems with continuous-time dynamics and multi-timescale plasticity, rather than a monolithic transformer.
François Chollet and the Modern Approach: Measuring What You Still Don't Know How to Do
Against the psychometric legacy, François Chollet proposed in 2019 a conceptual turn. His argument, in On the Measure of Intelligence, is that we were measuring the wrong thing.
Traditional AI benchmarks reward skills, specific competencies on concrete tasks. But a skill can be bought with data and computation: it is enough to train sufficiently on a task to master it. Intelligence, Chollet maintains, is not skill, but efficiency in the acquisition of skills: how much you learn from how little, when facing a genuinely new task (Chollet, 2019).
Intelligence is what you do when you don't know what to do.
This distinction changes everything. A system that solves a million problems because it has seen ten million similar ones is not intelligent. An intelligent system is the one that, facing a problem for which it could not prepare, discovers the structure and adapts with few examples. The measure stops being the final result and becomes the slope of learning.
ARC-AGI: The Benchmark That Tests Genuine AI Reasoning
ARC-AGI was born from that idea, and its most recent version, ARC-AGI-3, takes it further. It is not a question-and-answer test. It is a set of interactive environments, like mini-videogames, in which the agent explores an unknown world, deduces what the objective is without being told in natural language, builds a model of the environment and adapts its strategy step by step (ARC Prize, 2025).
The design principles are explicit: environments 100 % solvable by humans, with no preloaded knowledge or hidden instructions, and with enough novelty to prevent memorization. What is scored is not getting it right, but efficiency in the acquisition of skill over time.
It is the opposite of the g factor: instead of looking for what a system already masters and summarizing it, it looks for what it still does not know how to do and measures how much it costs it to learn it.
Data Contamination: Why LLM Benchmark Scores Are Inflated
The ultimate reason why Chollet's approach matters, and why the g factor applied to LLMs is so slippery, has a technical name: data contamination. If the exam, or something almost identical, was in the notes the student studied, their grade does not measure what they can reason. It measures what they have memorized.
Language models are trained on books, forums, code repositories, articles, practically all the available text. The benchmarks with which we then evaluate them are published on the internet. The conclusion is that fragments of the tests end up inside the training data, which violates the separation between training and evaluation and inflates the scores (Xu et al., 2024; Deng et al., 2024). Empirical audits have detected contamination levels ranging from 1 % up to 45 % in widely used benchmarks, and the problem grows over time (Li et al., 2024).
It is not a minor problem of a couple of leaked questions. In benchmarks as cited as MMLU or GSM8K, part of what we interpret as reasoning may be pure memorization (Chen et al., 2025). When decontamination techniques are applied that rewrite the leaked items without altering their difficulty, accuracy drops: in one study, 22.9 % on GSM8K and 19.0 % on MMLU (Zhu et al., 2024).
Paraphrased items, or even ones translated into another language, dodge the superficial-overlap detectors and continue to inflate the results (Yang et al., 2023; Yao et al., 2024). The usual solutions (paraphrasing, translating, tweaking the context) are assumed to be effective without having been validated rigorously. And for most open models we cannot even check anything, because their training data is not published. We are grading exams without knowing what the student studied.
Here one understands why ARC-AGI chose the path it chose. An interactive, novel environment, with no natural-language instructions and designed to prevent brute-force memorization is, by construction, resistant to contamination.
So, What Should We Measure to Evaluate Machine Intelligence?
The g factor is a populational property that, applied to models that share architecture and corpus, runs the risk of measuring the scale of computation and not generality. The lesson for whoever builds artificial systems is not to choose between the g factor and ARC-AGI as if they were rival teams. It is to understand what question each one answers. A factor analysis can be useful to describe the internal structure of a system's performance, as long as the first factor is not confused with an essence of intelligence. And an ARC-type protocol is indispensable for what really matters: checking whether the system generalizes beyond what it saw, or merely recites.
When we evaluate a system only by its final answer, we are measuring it with our eyes closed to its temporal dimension: planning, the updating of beliefs, the integration of evidence across many steps. It is exactly what ARC-AGI-3 decided to score, and exactly what a static exam cannot see.
Why Brain-Inspired AI Architectures Like Neuraxon Take a Different Path
If intelligence is not a stored number but the efficient integration of specialized subsystems, as suggested by the parieto-frontal integration theory (P-FIT) and the global availability of the workspace in the brain…
If that integration is above all a temporal phenomenon, with time scales…
Then a system built on modular architectures with functional spheres, plasticity across multiple temporal scales and continuous dynamics does not need to be evaluated by asking it to recite answers.
The correct question is not how many benchmarks it beats, but with what efficiency it acquires new behavior, over time, in environments for which it was not prepared. That is the direction Neuraxon tries to take. To compute time – that is, adaptation – not memorized answers that simulate being a good student, when in reality, it already knows the questions.
#AI #AGI #Qubic #TechTrends
References
Chollet, F. (2019). On the Measure of Intelligence. arXiv:1911.01547.Deary, I. J., Penke, L., & Johnson, W. (2009). The neuroscience of human intelligence differences. Nature Reviews Neuroscience.Dehaene, S., & Changeux, J.-P. (2011). Experimental and theoretical approaches to conscious processing. Neuron, 70(2), 200–227.Detterman, D. K., & Daniel, M. H. (1989). Correlations of mental tests with each other and with cognitive variables. Intelligence.Gignac, G. E., & Szodorai, E. T. (2024). Defining and identifying a general factor of ability in AI systems.Guttman, L. (1955). The determinacy of factor score matrices with implications for five other basic problems of common-factor theory. British Journal of Statistical Psychology.Hernández-Orallo, J., et al. (2021). General intelligence disentangled via a generality metric for natural and artificial intelligence. Scientific Reports.Honey, C. J., et al. (2012). Slow cortical dynamics and the accumulation of information over long timescales. Neuron, 76(2), 423–434.Ilić, D. (2023). Unveiling the General Intelligence Factor in Language Models: A Psychometric Approach. arXiv:2310.11616.Jung, R. E., & Haier, R. J. (2007). The Parieto-Frontal Integration Theory (P-FIT) of intelligence. Behavioral and Brain Sciences.Spearman, C. (1904). "General intelligence" objectively determined and measured. American Journal of Psychology, 15, 201–293.Roberts, M., et al. (2024). Temporal evidence of contamination from training cutoff dates.Schönemann, P. H. (2008). A Rejoinder to Mackintosh and some Remarks on the Concept of General Intelligence. arXiv:0808.2343.Xu, C., et al. (2024). Benchmark data contamination of large language models: a survey.Yang, S., et al. (2023). Rethinking benchmark and contamination for language models with rephrased samples.Zhu, Q., et al. (2024). Inference-Time Decontamination: Reusing leaked benchmarks for LLM evaluation. Findings of EMNLP 2024.ARC Prize (2025). ARC-AGI-3: An interactive reasoning benchmark. Technical Report.
Explore the Full Neuraxon Intelligence Academy Series
This is Volume 10 of the Neuraxon Intelligence Academy by the Qubic Scientific Team. If you are just joining us, explore the complete series to build a full understanding of the science behind Neuraxon, Aigarth, and Qubic's approach to brain-inspired, decentralized artificial intelligence:
NIA Volume 1: Why Intelligence Is Not Computed in Steps, but in Time — Explores why biological intelligence operates in continuous time rather than discrete computational steps like traditional LLMs.NIA Volume 2: Ternary Dynamics as a Model of Living Intelligence — Explains ternary dynamics and why three-state logic (excitatory, neutral, inhibitory) matters for modeling living systems.NIA Volume 3: Neuromodulation and Brain-Inspired AI — Covers neuromodulation and how the brain's chemical signaling (dopamine, serotonin, acetylcholine, norepinephrine) inspires Neuraxon's architecture.NIA Volume 4: Neural Networks in AI and Neuroscience — A deep comparison of biological neural networks, artificial neural networks, and Neuraxon's third-path approach.NIA Volume 5: Astrocytes and Brain-Inspired AI — How astrocytic gating transforms neural network plasticity through the AGMP framework in Neuraxon.NIA Volume 6: Conscious Machines vs Intelligent Organisms: AI Consciousness Explained — Explores AI consciousness through the lens of Global Workspace Theory, Integrated Information Theory, and predictive coding.NIA Volume 7: Conway's Game of Life, Artificial Life, and Digital Ecosystems — The science behind Qubic, Aigarth, and Neuraxon's emergent complexity and self-organized criticality.NIA Volume 8: Brain Criticality and the Branching Ratio in Neural and Artificial Networks — Why a branching ratio near 1 and self-organized criticality are bioinspired design principles in Neuraxon.NIA Volume 9: The Origins of the g Factor: From Education and Neuroscience to Artificial Intelligence — Explores the origins of the g factor across education, neuroscience, and AI.
$Qubic is a decentralized, open-source network for experimental technology. To learn more, visit qubic.org. Join the discussion on X, Discord, and Telegram.
We have no unit of measurement for intelligence. Not for humans. Not for machines. We've been arguing about it for over a century. Up to 45% of the benchmarks we use to evaluate LLMs contain leaked training data. ARC-AGI-3 was built to fix that. Humans solve 100% of it. Frontier AI scores below 1%. NIA Volume 10 breaks down the g factor, Chollet's framework, benchmark contamination, and what measuring machine intelligence actually requires. Full read 👇 [Measuring Machine Intelligence: The g Factor vs. ARC-AGI Benchmark](https://www.binance.com/en/square/post/332806106415490) @BiBi #AI #AGI #Qubic #TechTrends #Neuraxon
We have no unit of measurement for intelligence.

Not for humans. Not for machines.

We've been arguing about it for over a century.

Up to 45% of the benchmarks we use to evaluate LLMs contain leaked training data.

ARC-AGI-3 was built to fix that.

Humans solve 100% of it.

Frontier AI scores below 1%.

NIA Volume 10 breaks down the g factor, Chollet's framework, benchmark contamination, and what measuring machine intelligence actually requires.

Full read
👇
Measuring Machine Intelligence: The g Factor vs. ARC-AGI Benchmark

@Binance BiBi
#AI #AGI #Qubic #TechTrends #Neuraxon
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🖨️ Imprimiendo el futuro de #Worldcoin
🚫 Deja de ser la liquidez de salida de los desarrolladores.

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The g Factor: Qubic’s Radical Approach to AGI While the AI industry races to scale massive language models, Qubic’s Neuraxon research proposes a completely different path toward Artificial General Intelligence (AGI). Their thesis is simple: More text does not create true intelligence. Inspired by Charles Spearman’s “g Factor” theory from 1904, Qubic argues that real intelligence is not about predicting the next word, but about developing transferable cognitive abilities — adapting to new situations, solving unfamiliar problems, learning from mistakes, and coordinating knowledge across domains. Current LLMs excel at statistical language prediction, yet they still struggle when context or phrasing changes unexpectedly. They imitate intelligence, but lack a persistent and generalized cognitive structure. Project Neuraxon takes a bio-inspired direction through an artificial life simulation called “Multi-Neuraxon Game of Life Lite 5.0,” where artificial organisms evolve under environmental pressure. Instead of training on endless text datasets, Neuraxon attempts to evolve intelligence itself. Key concepts include: • Evolutionary selection rewarding adaptability • Modular brain-like architectures inspired by human cognition • Emergent intelligence through interaction and self-organization • Continuous learning over time instead of static inference All of this runs on Qubic’s decentralized Useful-Compute Network, transforming mining hardware into a large-scale AGI research infrastructure rather than wasting energy on meaningless hashing. Whether this becomes a breakthrough or not, Qubic is exploring one of the most unconventional and ambitious AGI experiments in crypto today. #crypto #AI #Qubic #AGI #artificialintelligence
The g Factor: Qubic’s Radical Approach to AGI
While the AI industry races to scale massive language models, Qubic’s Neuraxon research proposes a completely different path toward Artificial General Intelligence (AGI).
Their thesis is simple:
More text does not create true intelligence.
Inspired by Charles Spearman’s “g Factor” theory from 1904, Qubic argues that real intelligence is not about predicting the next word, but about developing transferable cognitive abilities — adapting to new situations, solving unfamiliar problems, learning from mistakes, and coordinating knowledge across domains.
Current LLMs excel at statistical language prediction, yet they still struggle when context or phrasing changes unexpectedly. They imitate intelligence, but lack a persistent and generalized cognitive structure.
Project Neuraxon takes a bio-inspired direction through an artificial life simulation called “Multi-Neuraxon Game of Life Lite 5.0,” where artificial organisms evolve under environmental pressure.
Instead of training on endless text datasets, Neuraxon attempts to evolve intelligence itself.
Key concepts include:
• Evolutionary selection rewarding adaptability
• Modular brain-like architectures inspired by human cognition
• Emergent intelligence through interaction and self-organization
• Continuous learning over time instead of static inference
All of this runs on Qubic’s decentralized Useful-Compute Network, transforming mining hardware into a large-scale AGI research infrastructure rather than wasting energy on meaningless hashing.
Whether this becomes a breakthrough or not, Qubic is exploring one of the most unconventional and ambitious AGI experiments in crypto today.
#crypto #AI #Qubic #AGI #artificialintelligence
Luck3333
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The g Factor in Artificial Life: From Spearman's 1904 Classroom to Evolved Artificial Brains
Neuraxon Intelligence Academy, Volume 9 · By the Qubic Scientific Team
In one line: General intelligence, the g factor psychologists have measured for over a century, is the missing ingredient in today's language models, and Qubic's Neuraxon project is now selecting for it directly inside an artificial-life simulation.

The g Factor: From a 1904 Classroom to Artificial Brains
In 1904, Charles Spearman stumbled upon a regularity that would forever change psychology. Examining the school grades of a group of English children, he noticed something seemingly trivial but strange: those who excelled in mathematics also tended to excel in French, in music, in language. Disciplines with no apparent connection correlated systematically with one another. Spearman proposed that beneath this tangle of disparate abilities there lay a single common factor, a general cognitive thread. He called it g (Spearman, 1904).
More than a century later, g remains one of the most replicated findings in the behavioral sciences (Carroll, 1993; Deary et al., 2010). It is neither a grade average nor an arbitrary construct: it is what emerges when factor analysis is applied to almost any battery of cognitive tests. It appears consistently when we measure working memory, fluid reasoning, processing speed, verbal comprehension, or novel problem solving. In psychometric terms, g is the shared variance that no single test measures on its own.

What the g Factor Means in the Brain and in Behavior
P-FIT Theory and Brain Network Efficiency
From cognitive neuroscience, g has ceased to be a statistical abstraction and has become a property of brain architecture. The P-FIT theory (Parieto-Frontal Integration Theory) identifies a distributed network made up of dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, posterior parietal cortex, anterior cingulate, and temporal areas, whose connection efficiency predicts intelligence test scores (Jung & Haier, 2007). Functional connectivity studies show that g correlates with the brain's ability to dynamically reconfigure its networks (the executive control network, the default mode network, the salience network) according to task demands (Barbey, 2018; Cole et al., 2015). It is not about having "more" neurons in a specific place, but about better orchestrating the flow of information between functionally specialized regions.
The Predictive Brain and Free-Energy Minimization
This orchestration acquires an even deeper meaning in light of the predictive brain theory (Clark, 2013; Friston, 2010). Under this framework, the brain is not a passive receiver of stimuli but a hierarchical inference engine that continuously generates predictions about the world and adjusts its internal models based on prediction error. Here g fits naturally: the ability to predict well, to anticipate environmental contingencies, to learn quickly from error and, above all, to abstract regularities that transfer across domains, is precisely what intelligence tests capture indirectly. A brain with high g would be, on this reading, a system with more efficient generative models, capable of compressing experience into high-level abstractions and of minimizing free energy across heterogeneous contexts (Hohwy, 2013); that is, it reduces prediction error rapidly and therefore learns. Cognitive generality, then, would not be a static property of the neural hardware, but the quality of a deeply hierarchical predictive process. The research remains open. Other currents posit that g really has to do with the neurodevelopment of our brain, given that no matter what task we are performing or attempting, there is a huge common factor in any experience because it happens inside the same organ.
Behaviorally, g is the best predictor. Forget emotional intelligence; it is g that best forecasts what your academic performance, occupational success, longevity, and even certain health indicators may be (Deary et al., 2010; Gottfredson, 1997). Not because it is destiny, but because it captures something very basic: the capacity of a cognitive system to face problems it has not seen before, integrating heterogeneous information under time and resource constraints. g is, in a sense, a measure of generality.

The Problem of Measuring General Intelligence in Artificial Systems
For decades, artificial systems have shone in narrow tasks (playing chess, classifying images, translating) but failed to transfer that performance outside their domain (Chollet, 2019). The #AGI debate revolves precisely around this: what does it mean, operationally, for a system to be "generally" intelligent?
If we take the parallel with human psychometrics seriously, the answer is uncomfortable but clear: to speak of generality we need to measure it, and measuring it requires diverse tests whose shared variance reveals something analogous to g. A system with high performance on a single task tells us nothing about its generality; a system with moderate and correlated performance across many structurally distinct tasks does. Spearman's logic, transferred to non-biological substrates, still holds: generality is not postulated, it is factored.
Why the g Factor Does Not Appear in Transformers (and What That Implies for AGI)
It is worth pausing here on the currently dominant paradigm. Large language models based on transformer architectures (Vaswani et al., 2017) deliver astonishing performance on linguistic tasks, but psychometric analyses applied to their outputs do not show the factor structure characteristic of g (Burnell et al., 2023; Ilić & Gignac, 2024). Their hits and misses across domains do not correlate as they would in humans; they depend rather on the density and quality of patterns present in their training data. A transformer can brilliantly solve one problem and fail on another that is structurally equivalent but phrased slightly differently, something a system with genuine g would not do (Mitchell, 2021).
This has serious implications. It suggests that the pursuit of cognitive generality exclusively through language may be a dead end, an architectural dead end. Language is the most visible output of human cognition, but not its substrate. To pretend that by scaling text one will arrive at g is like pretending that by scaling descriptions of chess games one will arrive at mastery: one obtains statistical mimicry, not the underlying cognitive structure. (We argued a closely related point in our analysis of why intelligence is not scale, and on why LLM predictions are not brain predictions.) Without genuine hierarchical prediction, without generative models of the world, without coordination between functionally specialized modules, behavior can look general without being so. The absence of g in transformers is not a failure of scale: it is a clue that generality requires other architectural ingredients (LeCun, 2022).
The g Factor Inside the Neuraxon Game of Life
We have taken this intuition to a different experimental terrain. In Multi-Neuraxon Game of Life Lite 5.0, the artificial creatures (the Nxons) grow their own brains and compete to survive. What is new in this version is that the selective pressure is applied to g. The Nxons are not selected for mastering a specific task, but for showing that common thread that allows them to face many.
The brains of the Nxons have been designed following a simplified model anchored in cognitive neuroscience, since they use six functional regions, inspired by the same kind of maps that psychologists use to describe the modular organization of the human brain. The bet is that generality does not emerge from a monolithic architecture, but from the coordination among specialized regions that share information flexibly. It is the P-FIT intuition translated into artificial life, and it connects directly with the predictive brain principle: each region contributes its own model, and the integration between them is what allows hierarchical prediction and, therefore, generality. (These dynamics build directly on the brain-criticality and branching-ratio principles we explored in Volume 8.)
Notably, the experiment is public and observable. Anyone can open their browser and watch how the Nxons evolve generation after generation, how their internal circuits reorganize under the pressure of a fitness function that rewards cognitive generality instead of specialization.
Implications for Artificial Life (Alife) and Applications for Qubic
For the field of artificial life, the explicit incorporation of g as a selection criterion opens a line of work that goes beyond academic exercise. Most Alife systems have evolved agents that solve very concrete niches: foraging, predator avoidance, navigation (Bedau, 2003; Lehman et al., 2020). But few have tried to select for something as abstract as the ability to generalize across heterogeneous cognitive domains. If we manage to get artificial organisms to show positive correlations between distinct tasks (the computational equivalent of Spearman's children) we will have an extraordinary test bench for questions that human psychometrics can only address correlationally: what evolutionary pressures favor the emergence of g? What neural architectures make it possible? Is g a convergent solution or a phylogenetic accident?
For Qubic, this line of research fits with a very concrete vision of the future of #AI . While the industry invests massive resources in scaling transformers over text, Qubic is committed to exploring architecturally alternative paths: modular artificial brains, evolved, distributed, and subjected to real selective pressures. Qubic's decentralized useful-compute network offers the ideal substrate for this kind of experimentation at scale, where thousands of Nxon populations can coevolve in parallel, with fitness functions designed to favor the emergence of g. It is not only open research: it is the possibility of building, on decentralized infrastructure, an empirical alternative to the dominant paradigm of language-based AI, one that starts from the right question (how to measure and select generality) instead of assuming it. If genuine cognitive generality requires architectures inspired by brains and not by corpora, Qubic is one of the few environments where that hypothesis can be seriously put to the test.
A deeper analysis is in preparation, as it forms part of our recent papers and experiments. Spearman's old g, that thread which wove together children's school grades, we now use in digital creatures that learn to survive.
References
Barbey, A. K. (2018). Network neuroscience theory of human intelligence. Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 22(1), 8–20. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tics.2017.10.001Bedau, M. A. (2003). Artificial life: Organization, adaptation and complexity from the bottom up. Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 7(11), 505–512. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tics.2003.09.012Burnell, R., Schellaert, W., Burden, J., Ullman, T. D., Martínez-Plumed, F., Tenenbaum, J. B., et al. (2023). Rethink reporting of evaluation results in AI. Science, 380(6641), 136–138. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.adf6369Carroll, J. B. (1993). Human cognitive abilities: A survey of factor-analytic studies. Cambridge University Press. https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511571312Chollet, F. (2019). On the measure of intelligence. arXiv preprint arXiv:1911.01547. https://arxiv.org/abs/1911.01547Clark, A. (2013). Whatever next? Predictive brains, situated agents, and the future of cognitive science. Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 36(3), 181–204. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0140525X12000477Cole, M. W., Ito, T., & Braver, T. S. (2015). Lateral prefrontal cortex contributes to fluid intelligence through multinetwork connectivity. Brain Connectivity, 5(8), 497–504. https://doi.org/10.1089/brain.2015.0357Deary, I. J., Penke, L., & Johnson, W. (2010). The neuroscience of human intelligence differences. Nature Reviews Neuroscience, 11(3), 201–211. https://doi.org/10.1038/nrn2793Friston, K. (2010). The free-energy principle: A unified brain theory? Nature Reviews Neuroscience, 11(2), 127–138. https://doi.org/10.1038/nrn2787Gottfredson, L. S. (1997). Why g matters: The complexity of everyday life. Intelligence, 24(1), 79–132. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0160-2896(97)90014-3Hohwy, J. (2013). The predictive mind. Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199682737.001.0001Ilić, D., & Gignac, G. E. (2024). Evidence of interrelated cognitive-like capabilities in large language models: Indications of artificial general intelligence or achievement? Intelligence, 106, 101858. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.intell.2024.101858Jung, R. E., & Haier, R. J. (2007). The Parieto-Frontal Integration Theory (P-FIT) of intelligence: Converging neuroimaging evidence. Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 30(2), 135–154. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0140525X07001185LeCun, Y. (2022). A path towards autonomous machine intelligence. OpenReview, version 0.9.2. https://openreview.net/forum?id=BZ5a1r-kVsfLehman, J., Clune, J., Misevic, D., Adami, C., Altenberg, L., Beaulieu, J., et al. (2020). The surprising creativity of digital evolution. Artificial Life, 26(2), 274–306. https://doi.org/10.1162/artl_a_00319Mitchell, M. (2021). Why AI is harder than we think. arXiv preprint arXiv:2104.12871. https://arxiv.org/abs/2104.12871Spearman, C. (1904). "General intelligence," objectively determined and measured. The American Journal of Psychology, 15(2), 201–292. https://doi.org/10.2307/1412107Vaswani, A., Shazeer, N., Parmar, N., Uszkoreit, J., Jones, L., Gomez, A. N., Kaiser, Ł., & Polosukhin, I. (2017). Attention is all you need. Advances in Neural Information Processing Systems, 30. https://arxiv.org/abs/1706.03762
Explore the Complete Neuraxon Intelligence Academy Series
This is Volume 9 of the #Neuraxon Intelligence Academy by the #Qubic Scientific Team. If you are just joining us, explore the complete series to build a full understanding of the science behind Neuraxon, Aigarth, and Qubic's approach to brain-inspired, #decentralized artificial intelligence:
NIA Volume 1: Why Intelligence Is Not Computed in Steps, but in Time. Explores why biological intelligence operates in continuous time rather than discrete computational steps like traditional LLMs.NIA Volume 2: Ternary Dynamics as a Model of Living Intelligence. Explains ternary dynamics and why three-state logic (excitatory, neutral, inhibitory) matters for modeling living systems.NIA Volume 3: Neuromodulation and Brain-Inspired AI. Covers neuromodulation and how the brain's chemical signaling (dopamine, serotonin, acetylcholine, norepinephrine) inspires Neuraxon's architecture.NIA Volume 4: Neural Networks in AI and Neuroscience. A deep comparison of biological neural networks, artificial neural networks, and Neuraxon's third-path approach.NIA Volume 5: Astrocytes and Brain-Inspired AI. How astrocytic gating transforms neural network plasticity through the AGMP framework in Neuraxon.NIA Volume 6: Conscious Machines vs Intelligent Organisms: AI Consciousness Explained. Explores AI consciousness through the lens of Global Workspace Theory, Integrated Information Theory, and predictive coding.NIA Volume 7: Conway's Game of Life, Artificial Life, and Digital Ecosystems. How emergent complexity and self-organized criticality move from simulators to decentralized AI infrastructure.NIA Volume 8: Brain Criticality and the Branching Ratio in Neural and Artificial Networks. Why a branching ratio near 1 and self-organized criticality are bioinspired design principles in Neuraxon.NIA Volume 9: The g Factor in Artificial Life. You are here.
Qubic is a decentralized, open-source network. To learn more, visit qubic.org or browse the full Academy and Blog. Join the discussion on X, Discord, and Telegram.
Qubic is a decentralized, open-source network for experimental technology. Nothing on this site should be construed as investment, legal, or financial advice.
Článok
Why Qubic Could Become the Infrastructure Layer for Decentralized AGIArtificial Intelligence is evolving faster than traditional infrastructure can support. Today’s AI systems rely heavily on centralized data centers, expensive GPU clusters, and massive energy consumption. While AI capabilities continue to grow, the underlying architecture remains fragile, costly, and controlled by a handful of corporations. Qubic introduces a radically different vision. Instead of treating blockchain as a financial ledger, Qubic transforms Layer-1 infrastructure into a native computational environment designed for decentralized Artificial General Intelligence (AGI). Its architecture combines: • Bare-metal execution through UEFI • Quorum-Based Computation (QBC) • Useful Proof-of-Work (uPoW) • A ternary neural ecosystem called Aigarth • Zero-fee microtransactions • Native AI computation integrated directly into consensus This isn’t just another blockchain competing for TPS. It is an attempt to build a decentralized “Global Brain.” Bare-Metal Execution: Eliminating the Bottlenecks Most blockchain systems operate on top of virtual machines and operating systems. Ethereum relies on the EVM. Solana uses the SVM. Qubic removes those abstraction layers entirely. The protocol executes directly on hardware using UEFI-based bare-metal architecture, allowing the network to maximize CPU efficiency while minimizing latency and computational overhead. The result is extraordinary throughput. According to CertiK benchmark verification: • Qubic achieved over 15.5 million TPS • Smart contract transfer operations exceeded 55 million TPS This fundamentally changes what decentralized computation can look like. Architecture Comparison Qubic: • ~15.5M TPS • Bare-metal execution • Quorum + uPoW consensus • Zero-fee transfers • Native AI computation Ethereum: • ~30 TPS • EVM virtual machine • Proof-of-Stake • Variable gas fees Solana: • ~65K theoretical TPS • SVM execution • PoH + PoS • Low fixed fees The Consensus Model Built for AI Traditional Proof-of-Work wastes computational energy solving meaningless hash puzzles. Qubic replaces this with Useful Proof-of-Work (uPoW). Instead of miners competing to calculate useless hashes, AI miners contribute computational work toward optimizing neural network structures. The challenge is verification. Useful computation is difficult to validate quickly without recomputing the entire workload. Qubic solves this through a hybrid verification framework: Deterministic AI tasks tied to consensus-generated random seedsIndependent verification through Oracle MachinesQuorum-based validation requiring agreement from 451 out of 676 Computors This creates a Byzantine Fault Tolerant AI-computing network capable of decentralized validation without centralized trust. Aigarth: The Ternary Neural Evolution System The most ambitious component of Qubic is Aigarth. Instead of building static large language models, Aigarth attempts to create an evolving neural ecosystem where AI structures compete, mutate, adapt, and self-optimize over time. Its core innovation is balanced ternary logic: T = {−1, 0, 1} Where: • -1 = FALSE / inhibitory • 0 = UNKNOWN / neutral • 1 = TRUE / excitatory This third “unknown” state allows the system to model uncertainty directly — something binary systems struggle to represent efficiently. The architecture introduces Intelligent Tissue Units (ITU), neural structures capable of asynchronous adaptation and evolutionary optimization. Unlike traditional perceptrons, Aigarth’s Neuraxon v2.0 model includes: • Continuous signal processing • Temporal weighting • Structural plasticity • Neuromodulator-inspired adaptation The goal is not simply faster AI. The goal is emergent cognition. Why the Economic Model Matters Qubic also introduces an unusual economic structure. Regular transfers are completely free. QUBIC tokens are only burned when used as “energy” for smart contract execution. Additionally: • Smart contract IPOs use Dutch auction mechanisms • IPO proceeds are permanently locked and gradually burned • Doge-Connect allows Scrypt ASIC miners to mine DOGE while contributing value back into the Qubic ecosystem • Revenue can be used for QUBIC buybacks and burns This creates a deflationary feedback loop tied directly to computational utility. The Bigger Picture Most AI companies today are building centralized superintelligence. Qubic is attempting the opposite: a decentralized AGI infrastructure owned by nobody and operated by everyone. If successful, this would represent a fundamental shift in how intelligence is created, distributed, and controlled. The project is still highly experimental. But conceptually, Qubic may be one of the few blockchain architectures genuinely designed for large-scale decentralized AI computation rather than financial speculation alone. And that makes it worth paying attention to. #Qubic #AI #AGI #crypto #blockchain

Why Qubic Could Become the Infrastructure Layer for Decentralized AGI

Artificial Intelligence is evolving faster than traditional infrastructure can support.
Today’s AI systems rely heavily on centralized data centers, expensive GPU clusters, and massive energy consumption. While AI capabilities continue to grow, the underlying architecture remains fragile, costly, and controlled by a handful of corporations.
Qubic introduces a radically different vision.
Instead of treating blockchain as a financial ledger, Qubic transforms Layer-1 infrastructure into a native computational environment designed for decentralized Artificial General Intelligence (AGI).
Its architecture combines: • Bare-metal execution through UEFI • Quorum-Based Computation (QBC) • Useful Proof-of-Work (uPoW) • A ternary neural ecosystem called Aigarth • Zero-fee microtransactions • Native AI computation integrated directly into consensus
This isn’t just another blockchain competing for TPS.
It is an attempt to build a decentralized “Global Brain.”
Bare-Metal Execution: Eliminating the Bottlenecks
Most blockchain systems operate on top of virtual machines and operating systems.
Ethereum relies on the EVM. Solana uses the SVM.
Qubic removes those abstraction layers entirely.
The protocol executes directly on hardware using UEFI-based bare-metal architecture, allowing the network to maximize CPU efficiency while minimizing latency and computational overhead.
The result is extraordinary throughput.
According to CertiK benchmark verification: • Qubic achieved over 15.5 million TPS • Smart contract transfer operations exceeded 55 million TPS
This fundamentally changes what decentralized computation can look like.
Architecture Comparison
Qubic: • ~15.5M TPS • Bare-metal execution • Quorum + uPoW consensus • Zero-fee transfers • Native AI computation
Ethereum: • ~30 TPS • EVM virtual machine • Proof-of-Stake • Variable gas fees
Solana: • ~65K theoretical TPS • SVM execution • PoH + PoS • Low fixed fees
The Consensus Model Built for AI
Traditional Proof-of-Work wastes computational energy solving meaningless hash puzzles.
Qubic replaces this with Useful Proof-of-Work (uPoW).
Instead of miners competing to calculate useless hashes, AI miners contribute computational work toward optimizing neural network structures.
The challenge is verification.
Useful computation is difficult to validate quickly without recomputing the entire workload.
Qubic solves this through a hybrid verification framework:
Deterministic AI tasks tied to consensus-generated random seedsIndependent verification through Oracle MachinesQuorum-based validation requiring agreement from 451 out of 676 Computors
This creates a Byzantine Fault Tolerant AI-computing network capable of decentralized validation without centralized trust.
Aigarth: The Ternary Neural Evolution System
The most ambitious component of Qubic is Aigarth.
Instead of building static large language models, Aigarth attempts to create an evolving neural ecosystem where AI structures compete, mutate, adapt, and self-optimize over time.
Its core innovation is balanced ternary logic:
T = {−1, 0, 1}
Where: • -1 = FALSE / inhibitory • 0 = UNKNOWN / neutral • 1 = TRUE / excitatory
This third “unknown” state allows the system to model uncertainty directly — something binary systems struggle to represent efficiently.
The architecture introduces Intelligent Tissue Units (ITU), neural structures capable of asynchronous adaptation and evolutionary optimization.
Unlike traditional perceptrons, Aigarth’s Neuraxon v2.0 model includes: • Continuous signal processing • Temporal weighting • Structural plasticity • Neuromodulator-inspired adaptation
The goal is not simply faster AI.
The goal is emergent cognition.
Why the Economic Model Matters
Qubic also introduces an unusual economic structure.
Regular transfers are completely free.
QUBIC tokens are only burned when used as “energy” for smart contract execution.
Additionally: • Smart contract IPOs use Dutch auction mechanisms • IPO proceeds are permanently locked and gradually burned • Doge-Connect allows Scrypt ASIC miners to mine DOGE while contributing value back into the Qubic ecosystem • Revenue can be used for QUBIC buybacks and burns
This creates a deflationary feedback loop tied directly to computational utility.
The Bigger Picture
Most AI companies today are building centralized superintelligence.
Qubic is attempting the opposite: a decentralized AGI infrastructure owned by nobody and operated by everyone.
If successful, this would represent a fundamental shift in how intelligence is created, distributed, and controlled.
The project is still highly experimental.
But conceptually, Qubic may be one of the few blockchain architectures genuinely designed for large-scale decentralized AI computation rather than financial speculation alone.
And that makes it worth paying attention to.
#Qubic #AI #AGI #crypto #blockchain
Qubic Bridging 137 Years of Science Into Next-Gen AI Real-World Application! 🧠💻 Many crypto projects stay trapped in theory, but #Qubic is proving its real-world utility at the highest scientific levels. At the upcoming 11th International Conference on Machine Learning Technologies (May 20-22) in Berlin, researchers David Vivancos and Jose Sánchez are set to unveil "Neuraxon"—a biologically inspired Artificial Neuron computation blueprint. How is $Qubic making this a reality? Real-World Infrastructure: Qubic isn’t just a network; it provides the core computational powerhouse needed to simulate complex biological neural growth. True Open Science: Driven by Qubic’s decentralized ecosystem, empowering global researchers to break AI monopolies. The Path to True AI: Transitioning from basic machine learning straight into advanced AGI. History comes full circle in Berlin. In 1889, the first human neuron was shown there. In May 2026, Qubic powers the architecture to replicate it on machines. This is utility. This is the future of AI. 👉https://www.researchgate.net/publication/400868863_Neuraxon_V20_A_New_Neural_Growth_Computation_Blueprint #Qubic #AI #AGI #Neuraxon
Qubic Bridging 137 Years of Science Into Next-Gen AI Real-World Application! 🧠💻
Many crypto projects stay trapped in theory, but #Qubic is proving its real-world utility at the highest scientific levels.
At the upcoming 11th International Conference on Machine Learning Technologies (May 20-22) in Berlin, researchers David Vivancos and Jose Sánchez are set to unveil "Neuraxon"—a biologically inspired Artificial Neuron computation blueprint.
How is $Qubic making this a reality?
Real-World Infrastructure: Qubic isn’t just a network; it provides the core computational powerhouse needed to simulate complex biological neural growth.
True Open Science: Driven by Qubic’s decentralized ecosystem, empowering global researchers to break AI monopolies.
The Path to True AI: Transitioning from basic machine learning straight into advanced AGI.
History comes full circle in Berlin. In 1889, the first human neuron was shown there. In May 2026, Qubic powers the architecture to replicate it on machines. This is utility. This is the future of AI.
👉https://www.researchgate.net/publication/400868863_Neuraxon_V20_A_New_Neural_Growth_Computation_Blueprint

#Qubic #AI #AGI #Neuraxon
🚨THE MAN WHO WARNED THE WORLD ABOUT AGI JUST MADE A SHOCKING MARKET BET Leopold Aschenbrenner quietly loaded nearly $8 BILLION into AI and semiconductor names in one quarter. $NVDA $AMD $TSM $ASML $AVGO $MU …and more. But buried inside the filings was the real signal. Last quarter he was massively bullish on Intel. This quarter? He flipped to a PUT position. At the same time, he started piling into Bitcoin miners transforming into AI infrastructure plays: Applied Digital. Bitfarms. IREN. Riot. Hive. CleanSpark. That changes the entire interpretation. This may not be a bet that chip demand explodes forever. It may be a bet that AI compute becomes so extreme the market starts rewarding whoever controls power, cooling, and data center capacity instead of just silicon. Everyone is obsessed with chips. Very few are paying attention to the electricity war forming underneath AI. The AGI trade may already be evolving from semiconductors… into energy-backed compute monopolies. That is where the next trillion-dollar narrative could emerge. #AI #NVDA #Bitcoin #AGI #Stocks
🚨THE MAN WHO WARNED THE WORLD ABOUT AGI JUST MADE A SHOCKING MARKET BET

Leopold Aschenbrenner quietly loaded nearly $8 BILLION into AI and semiconductor names in one quarter.

$NVDA
$AMD
$TSM
$ASML
$AVGO
$MU
…and more.

But buried inside the filings was the real signal.

Last quarter he was massively bullish on Intel.
This quarter?
He flipped to a PUT position.

At the same time, he started piling into Bitcoin miners transforming into AI infrastructure plays:
Applied Digital.
Bitfarms.
IREN.
Riot.
Hive.
CleanSpark.

That changes the entire interpretation.

This may not be a bet that chip demand explodes forever.
It may be a bet that AI compute becomes so extreme the market starts rewarding whoever controls power, cooling, and data center capacity instead of just silicon.

Everyone is obsessed with chips.
Very few are paying attention to the electricity war forming underneath AI.

The AGI trade may already be evolving from semiconductors…
into energy-backed compute monopolies.

That is where the next trillion-dollar narrative could emerge.

#AI #NVDA #Bitcoin #AGI #Stocks
Ex-OpenAI's Leopold Aschenbrenner is crushing it! 🚀 He turned a $200M bet on AI infra into a massive $3.6B portfolio. This shift from research to scaling bets is legendary. Definitely a name to watch as AGI evolves. 📈🔥 #AGI #rsshanto $BTC $BNB $XRP {future}(XRPUSDT)
Ex-OpenAI's Leopold Aschenbrenner is crushing it! 🚀

He turned a $200M bet on AI infra into a massive $3.6B portfolio.

This shift from research to scaling bets is legendary.

Definitely a name to watch as AGI evolves. 📈🔥
#AGI #rsshanto $BTC $BNB $XRP
NVIDIA and Google Cloud aren't building software. They're building factories. AI Factories. Physical. Real. And they're about to change everything you thought AI was for. Forget chatbots. Forget image generators. This is AI operating robots. Vehicles. Real-world machines trained, simulated, and deployed at a scale the world has never seen. Here's what's actually happening under the hood: They're combining cloud compute + synthetic data + autonomous AI agents to simulate entire real-world environments before a single robot ever touches the physical world. Train in the simulation. Deploy in reality. Repeat at scale. This is how you manufacture intelligence the same way Henry Ford manufactured cars. The assembly line didn't just make cars faster. It remade civilization. That's what an AI Factory does except the output isn't vehicles. It's decisions. It's motion. It's machines that act, react, and adapt without a human in the loop. NVIDIA brings the silicon and the simulation stack. Google Cloud brings the compute backbone and the agentic AI layer. Together? They just became the largest AI infrastructure play aimed at the physical world. Not the internet. The real world. Every warehouse. Every port. Every autonomous vehicle fleet. Every surgical robot. Every factory floor this is the market they just claimed. We're not in the ChatGPT era anymore. We're in the era of AI that moves. #NVIDIA #GoogleCloud #AIAgents #PhysicalAI #AGI
NVIDIA and Google Cloud aren't building software.
They're building factories.
AI Factories. Physical. Real. And they're about to change everything you thought AI was for.
Forget chatbots. Forget image generators. This is AI operating robots. Vehicles. Real-world machines trained, simulated, and deployed at a scale the world has never seen.
Here's what's actually happening under the hood:
They're combining cloud compute + synthetic data + autonomous AI agents to simulate entire real-world environments before a single robot ever touches the physical world.
Train in the simulation. Deploy in reality. Repeat at scale.
This is how you manufacture intelligence the same way Henry Ford manufactured cars.
The assembly line didn't just make cars faster. It remade civilization.
That's what an AI Factory does except the output isn't vehicles. It's decisions. It's motion. It's machines that act, react, and adapt without a human in the loop.
NVIDIA brings the silicon and the simulation stack. Google Cloud brings the compute backbone and the agentic AI layer.
Together? They just became the largest AI infrastructure play aimed at the physical world.
Not the internet. The real world.
Every warehouse. Every port. Every autonomous vehicle fleet. Every surgical robot. Every factory floor this is the market they just claimed.
We're not in the ChatGPT era anymore.
We're in the era of AI that moves.
#NVIDIA #GoogleCloud #AIAgents #PhysicalAI #AGI
Článok
Intelligence Is Not Scale: A Scientific Response to Jensen Huang's AGI Claim“I think it’s now. I think we’ve achieved AGI.” Those were the words of Jensen Huang on the Lex Fridman podcast, sending shockwaves through the AI community and reigniting the most consequential debate in artificial intelligence: has artificial general intelligence been achieved? But Nvidia’s CEO purposely evaded any kind of rigorous explanation, research, or debate about what AGI actually means. His definition of AGI was pure hype: an AI system that can build a company worth $1 billion. Just that. Most AGI definitions tend to refer to matching a vast range of human cognitive skills. For Jensen Huang, implicitly, intelligence equates with scale. With larger models, more parameters, more data, and more compute, systems will become more capable. Under this view, intelligence is a byproduct of quantitative expansion. The Scaling Hypothesis: Why Bigger AI Models Don’t Mean Smarter AI We assume this approach has produced undeniable advances. Large-scale models display impressive performance across a wide range of tasks, often surpassing human benchmarks in narrow domains (Bommasani et al., 2021). However, we have pinpointed several times this underlying assumption as fragile: increasing capacity won’t produce generality. The limitation is not simply practical, but structural. Scaling improves performance within known distributions, but does not guarantee coherent behavior outside them (Lake et al., 2017). It amplifies what is already present; it does not reorganize the system. As IBM’s research has emphasized, today’s LLMs still struggle with fundamental reasoning tasks: they predict, but they do not truly understand. As a result, these systems often exhibit a familiar pattern: strong local competence combined with global inconsistency. They can solve complex problems, yet fail in simple ones. They can generalize in some contexts, yet collapse in others. The issue is not lack of capability, but lack of integration. This is precisely why the AGI scaling debate in 2026 has intensified: computation is physical, and scaling has hit diminishing returns. Google DeepMind’s Cognitive Framework for Measuring AGI Progress A second position, articulated in recent frameworks by Google DeepMind, defines intelligence as a multidimensional construct composed of cognitive faculties such as perception, memory, learning, reasoning, and metacognition. Much better… Under this view, progress toward AGI can be measured by evaluating systems across a battery of tasks designed to probe each of these faculties (Burnell et al., 2026). But how are tasks designed? Are we training AI’s with the questions and answers they will face in the probes? Source: Burnell, R. et al. (2026). Measuring Progress Toward AGI: A Cognitive Framework. Google DeepMind. View paper (PDF) At least this approach acknowledges that intelligence is not a single scalar quantity, but a complex set of interacting abilities, grounded in decades of work in cognitive science (Carroll, 1993; Cattell, 1963). Why Cognitive Profiles Alone Cannot Define Artificial General Intelligence However, the limitation lies in how these faculties are treated. Although the framework recognizes their interaction, it ultimately evaluates them as separable components, building a “cognitive profile” of strengths and weaknesses. This introduces a critical and surprising distortion. Because intelligence is not the sum of faculties. It is what emerges when those faculties are organized under a unified dynamic. In fact, the g factor, as we explained in our first scientific foundational paper, shows a clear hierarchy. Components organize in layers! Source: Sanchez, J. & Vivancos, D. (2024). Qubic AGI Journey: Human and Artificial Intelligence: Toward an AGI with Aigarth. View paper on ResearchGate A system can score highly across multiple domains and still fail to behave intelligently in a general sense. Not because it lacks capabilities, but because those capabilities are not coherently integrated. The DeepMind framework explicitly avoids specifying how these processes are implemented, focusing instead on what the system can do. This makes it useful as a benchmarking tool, but insufficient as a theory of intelligence. Somehow it seems AI companies forget what we know about intelligence for a century: what it is, how to measure it, which are the components, domains, and their interactions. The Weakest Link Problem: Why Average AI Performance Hides Critical Failures The key issue is that performance is being measured, but organization is not. And this leads to a deeper problem: the weakness of a system lies in the weakest link of its chain. A system can perform well on average while still failing systematically in specific dimensions such as context maintenance or stability. These failures are not marginal. They define the system. A system that reasons but cannot maintain context, that learns but cannot transfer, that generates but cannot validate, is not partially intelligent. It is structurally limited. And this limitation does not appear in averaged profiles, because averaging masks the point of failure. In real intelligence, there is no tolerance for internal discontinuity. The moment one component fails to integrate with the others, behavior ceases to be general and becomes local (Kovacs & Conway, 2016). This is precisely the pattern observed in current AI systems: highly developed capabilities that are weakly coupled. As explored in our deep comparison of biological and artificial neural networks, the gap between pattern recognition and genuine cognitive integration remains vast. Qubic’s Approach: Intelligence as Adaptive Organization Under Uncertainty For Qubic/Aigarth/Neuraxon, intelligence is not defined by the number of capabilities a system has, nor by how well it performs on predefined tasks, but by how it behaves when it does not already know what to do. Because that’s the epitome of intelligence: what you do when you don’t know what to do. In this sense, intelligence is fundamentally an adaptive process under uncertainty (Bereiter, 1995). This view aligns with classical definitions, where intelligence is understood as the capacity to solve novel problems, build internal models, and act upon them (Goertzel & Pennachin, 2007). But it extends them by emphasizing the substrate in which these processes occur. Biological Evidence: The G Factor, Brain Networks, and Cognitive Integration From this perspective, intelligence emerges from the organization of the system, not from its components. Biological evidence supports this shift. The general intelligence factor (g) is not explained by isolated cognitive modules, but by the efficiency and integration of large-scale brain networks (Jung & Haier, 2007; Basten et al., 2015). Intelligence correlates more strongly with patterns of connectivity and coordinated activity than with the performance of individual regions. Our research on the [fruit fly connectome](https://www.binance.com/en/square/post/307317567485186) further reinforces this principle: even in the simplest complete brain map ever produced, intelligence begins with architecture. The connectome of Drosophila demonstrates that part of intelligence may reside in structure even before learning occurs. Aigarth and Multi-Neuraxon: Brain-Inspired AI Architecture for True AGI Architectures such as Aigarth and [Multi-Neuraxon](https://github.com/DavidVivancos/Neuraxon) attempt to operationalize this idea. Instead of maximizing scale or enumerating capabilities, they focus on how multiple interacting units (Spheres, oscillatory channels, and dynamic gating mechanisms) can produce coherent behavior across contexts (Sanchez & Vivancos, 2024). In these systems, intelligence is not predefined. It is not encoded in modules or evaluated as a checklist of abilities. It emerges from the interaction between components that are themselves adaptive, temporally structured, and mutually constrained. As we explore in the [Neuraxon Intelligence Academy](https://www.binance.com/en/square/post/302913958960674), these networks incorporate neuromodulation, multi-timescale plasticity, and astrocytic gating, principles drawn directly from neuroscience, to create systems with internal ecology rather than mere computational power. Importantly, this approach directly addresses the problem ignored by the other two: integration. The question of [AI consciousness vs. intelligence](https://www.binance.com/en/square/post/310198879866145) further illuminates this distinction: a system that integrates multiple scales, maintains dynamic stability, and evolves without losing coherence provides a far stronger foundation for general intelligence. Conclusion: Why the AGI Debate Must Move Beyond Hype and Benchmarks Because in an organized system, failure in one component propagates through the whole. That is why neither Jensen Huang’s economic definition nor DeepMind’s cognitive profiling captures the essence of artificial general intelligence. The path to AGI does not run through larger GPU clusters or longer checklists of cognitive abilities. It runs through the fundamental reorganization of how AI systems are built: from optimization to organization. We must move from optimization (LLMs) to organization (Aigarth). We strongly believe this is one of the most relevant shifts in the future of artificial intelligence. Scientific References Basten, U., Hilger, K., & Fiebach, C. J. (2015). Where smart brains are different: A quantitative meta-analysis of functional and structural brain imaging studies on intelligence. Intelligence, 51, 10–27. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.intell.2015.04.009Bereiter, C. (1995). A dispositional view of transfer. Teaching for Transfer: Fostering Generalization in Learning, 21–34.Bommasani, R., Hudson, D. A., Adeli, E., et al. (2021). On the opportunities and risks of foundation models. arXiv preprint arXiv:2108.07258. https://arxiv.org/abs/2108.07258Burnell, R., Yamamori, Y., Firat, O., et al. (2026). Measuring Progress Toward AGI: A Cognitive Framework. Google DeepMind. View paperCarroll, J. B. (1993). Human cognitive abilities: A survey of factor-analytic studies. Cambridge University Press. https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511571312Cattell, R. B. (1963). Theory of fluid and crystallized intelligence: A critical experiment. Journal of Educational Psychology, 54(1), 1–22.Goertzel, B., & Pennachin, C. (2007). Artificial General Intelligence. Springer.Jung, R. E., & Haier, R. J. (2007). The Parieto-Frontal Integration Theory (P-FIT) of intelligence. Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 30(2), 135–154. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0140525X07001185Kovacs, K., & Conway, A. R. A. (2016). Process overlap theory: A unified account of the general factor of intelligence. Psychological Inquiry, 27(3), 151–177. https://doi.org/10.1080/1047840X.2016.1153946Lake, B. M., Ullman, T. D., Tenenbaum, J. B., & Gershman, S. J. (2017). Building machines that learn and think like people. Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 40, e253. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0140525X16001837Sanchez, J., & Vivancos, D. (2024). Qubic AGI Journey: Human and Artificial Intelligence: Toward an AGI with Aigarth. Preprint. View on ResearchGate #Qubic #AGI #artificialintelligence #CryptoAi #INNOVATION

Intelligence Is Not Scale: A Scientific Response to Jensen Huang's AGI Claim

“I think it’s now. I think we’ve achieved AGI.” Those were the words of Jensen Huang on the Lex Fridman podcast, sending shockwaves through the AI community and reigniting the most consequential debate in artificial intelligence: has artificial general intelligence been achieved?
But Nvidia’s CEO purposely evaded any kind of rigorous explanation, research, or debate about what AGI actually means. His definition of AGI was pure hype: an AI system that can build a company worth $1 billion. Just that. Most AGI definitions tend to refer to matching a vast range of human cognitive skills. For Jensen Huang, implicitly, intelligence equates with scale. With larger models, more parameters, more data, and more compute, systems will become more capable. Under this view, intelligence is a byproduct of quantitative expansion.
The Scaling Hypothesis: Why Bigger AI Models Don’t Mean Smarter AI
We assume this approach has produced undeniable advances. Large-scale models display impressive performance across a wide range of tasks, often surpassing human benchmarks in narrow domains (Bommasani et al., 2021). However, we have pinpointed several times this underlying assumption as fragile: increasing capacity won’t produce generality.
The limitation is not simply practical, but structural. Scaling improves performance within known distributions, but does not guarantee coherent behavior outside them (Lake et al., 2017). It amplifies what is already present; it does not reorganize the system. As IBM’s research has emphasized, today’s LLMs still struggle with fundamental reasoning tasks: they predict, but they do not truly understand.
As a result, these systems often exhibit a familiar pattern: strong local competence combined with global inconsistency. They can solve complex problems, yet fail in simple ones. They can generalize in some contexts, yet collapse in others. The issue is not lack of capability, but lack of integration. This is precisely why the AGI scaling debate in 2026 has intensified: computation is physical, and scaling has hit diminishing returns.
Google DeepMind’s Cognitive Framework for Measuring AGI Progress
A second position, articulated in recent frameworks by Google DeepMind, defines intelligence as a multidimensional construct composed of cognitive faculties such as perception, memory, learning, reasoning, and metacognition. Much better…
Under this view, progress toward AGI can be measured by evaluating systems across a battery of tasks designed to probe each of these faculties (Burnell et al., 2026). But how are tasks designed? Are we training AI’s with the questions and answers they will face in the probes?
Source: Burnell, R. et al. (2026). Measuring Progress Toward AGI: A Cognitive Framework. Google DeepMind. View paper (PDF)
At least this approach acknowledges that intelligence is not a single scalar quantity, but a complex set of interacting abilities, grounded in decades of work in cognitive science (Carroll, 1993; Cattell, 1963).
Why Cognitive Profiles Alone Cannot Define Artificial General Intelligence
However, the limitation lies in how these faculties are treated. Although the framework recognizes their interaction, it ultimately evaluates them as separable components, building a “cognitive profile” of strengths and weaknesses.
This introduces a critical and surprising distortion.
Because intelligence is not the sum of faculties. It is what emerges when those faculties are organized under a unified dynamic. In fact, the g factor, as we explained in our first scientific foundational paper, shows a clear hierarchy. Components organize in layers!
Source: Sanchez, J. & Vivancos, D. (2024). Qubic AGI Journey: Human and Artificial Intelligence: Toward an AGI with Aigarth. View paper on ResearchGate
A system can score highly across multiple domains and still fail to behave intelligently in a general sense. Not because it lacks capabilities, but because those capabilities are not coherently integrated. The DeepMind framework explicitly avoids specifying how these processes are implemented, focusing instead on what the system can do. This makes it useful as a benchmarking tool, but insufficient as a theory of intelligence. Somehow it seems AI companies forget what we know about intelligence for a century: what it is, how to measure it, which are the components, domains, and their interactions.
The Weakest Link Problem: Why Average AI Performance Hides Critical Failures
The key issue is that performance is being measured, but organization is not.
And this leads to a deeper problem: the weakness of a system lies in the weakest link of its chain. A system can perform well on average while still failing systematically in specific dimensions such as context maintenance or stability. These failures are not marginal. They define the system.
A system that reasons but cannot maintain context, that learns but cannot transfer, that generates but cannot validate, is not partially intelligent. It is structurally limited. And this limitation does not appear in averaged profiles, because averaging masks the point of failure.
In real intelligence, there is no tolerance for internal discontinuity. The moment one component fails to integrate with the others, behavior ceases to be general and becomes local (Kovacs & Conway, 2016).
This is precisely the pattern observed in current AI systems: highly developed capabilities that are weakly coupled. As explored in our deep comparison of biological and artificial neural networks, the gap between pattern recognition and genuine cognitive integration remains vast.
Qubic’s Approach: Intelligence as Adaptive Organization Under Uncertainty
For Qubic/Aigarth/Neuraxon, intelligence is not defined by the number of capabilities a system has, nor by how well it performs on predefined tasks, but by how it behaves when it does not already know what to do. Because that’s the epitome of intelligence: what you do when you don’t know what to do.
In this sense, intelligence is fundamentally an adaptive process under uncertainty (Bereiter, 1995). This view aligns with classical definitions, where intelligence is understood as the capacity to solve novel problems, build internal models, and act upon them (Goertzel & Pennachin, 2007). But it extends them by emphasizing the substrate in which these processes occur.
Biological Evidence: The G Factor, Brain Networks, and Cognitive Integration
From this perspective, intelligence emerges from the organization of the system, not from its components. Biological evidence supports this shift. The general intelligence factor (g) is not explained by isolated cognitive modules, but by the efficiency and integration of large-scale brain networks (Jung & Haier, 2007; Basten et al., 2015). Intelligence correlates more strongly with patterns of connectivity and coordinated activity than with the performance of individual regions.
Our research on the fruit fly connectome further reinforces this principle: even in the simplest complete brain map ever produced, intelligence begins with architecture. The connectome of Drosophila demonstrates that part of intelligence may reside in structure even before learning occurs.
Aigarth and Multi-Neuraxon: Brain-Inspired AI Architecture for True AGI
Architectures such as Aigarth and Multi-Neuraxon attempt to operationalize this idea. Instead of maximizing scale or enumerating capabilities, they focus on how multiple interacting units (Spheres, oscillatory channels, and dynamic gating mechanisms) can produce coherent behavior across contexts (Sanchez & Vivancos, 2024).
In these systems, intelligence is not predefined. It is not encoded in modules or evaluated as a checklist of abilities. It emerges from the interaction between components that are themselves adaptive, temporally structured, and mutually constrained. As we explore in the Neuraxon Intelligence Academy, these networks incorporate neuromodulation, multi-timescale plasticity, and astrocytic gating, principles drawn directly from neuroscience, to create systems with internal ecology rather than mere computational power.
Importantly, this approach directly addresses the problem ignored by the other two: integration. The question of AI consciousness vs. intelligence further illuminates this distinction: a system that integrates multiple scales, maintains dynamic stability, and evolves without losing coherence provides a far stronger foundation for general intelligence.
Conclusion: Why the AGI Debate Must Move Beyond Hype and Benchmarks
Because in an organized system, failure in one component propagates through the whole. That is why neither Jensen Huang’s economic definition nor DeepMind’s cognitive profiling captures the essence of artificial general intelligence. The path to AGI does not run through larger GPU clusters or longer checklists of cognitive abilities. It runs through the fundamental reorganization of how AI systems are built: from optimization to organization.
We must move from optimization (LLMs) to organization (Aigarth). We strongly believe this is one of the most relevant shifts in the future of artificial intelligence.
Scientific References
Basten, U., Hilger, K., & Fiebach, C. J. (2015). Where smart brains are different: A quantitative meta-analysis of functional and structural brain imaging studies on intelligence. Intelligence, 51, 10–27. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.intell.2015.04.009Bereiter, C. (1995). A dispositional view of transfer. Teaching for Transfer: Fostering Generalization in Learning, 21–34.Bommasani, R., Hudson, D. A., Adeli, E., et al. (2021). On the opportunities and risks of foundation models. arXiv preprint arXiv:2108.07258. https://arxiv.org/abs/2108.07258Burnell, R., Yamamori, Y., Firat, O., et al. (2026). Measuring Progress Toward AGI: A Cognitive Framework. Google DeepMind. View paperCarroll, J. B. (1993). Human cognitive abilities: A survey of factor-analytic studies. Cambridge University Press. https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511571312Cattell, R. B. (1963). Theory of fluid and crystallized intelligence: A critical experiment. Journal of Educational Psychology, 54(1), 1–22.Goertzel, B., & Pennachin, C. (2007). Artificial General Intelligence. Springer.Jung, R. E., & Haier, R. J. (2007). The Parieto-Frontal Integration Theory (P-FIT) of intelligence. Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 30(2), 135–154. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0140525X07001185Kovacs, K., & Conway, A. R. A. (2016). Process overlap theory: A unified account of the general factor of intelligence. Psychological Inquiry, 27(3), 151–177. https://doi.org/10.1080/1047840X.2016.1153946Lake, B. M., Ullman, T. D., Tenenbaum, J. B., & Gershman, S. J. (2017). Building machines that learn and think like people. Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 40, e253. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0140525X16001837Sanchez, J., & Vivancos, D. (2024). Qubic AGI Journey: Human and Artificial Intelligence: Toward an AGI with Aigarth. Preprint. View on ResearchGate
#Qubic #AGI #artificialintelligence #CryptoAi #INNOVATION
Google just hired a philosopher to prepare for machine consciousness. Let that sink in. Not a neuroscientist. Not an engineer. A philosopher Cambridge's Henry Shevlin brought in specifically to lead research on machine consciousness, human-AI relationships, and AGI readiness. Starting May 2026. This isn't PR. This is a signal. Meanwhile, Alphabet is dropping $175B–$185B on AI infrastructure this year alone. That's nearly DOUBLE the $91B they spent in 2025. Over 3x the $52B from 2024. You don't spend that kind of money on a calculator. They're not building a tool anymore. They're building something that might need rights. That might need ethics. That might need someone to ask does it feel anything? The engineers build the mind. The philosopher asks if it wakes up. First comes intelligence. Then comes awareness. Then comes the question nobody's ready to answer. We are so early and so late at the same time. #AGI #ArtificialIntelligence #GoogleDeepMind #MachineLearning #Crypto
Google just hired a philosopher to prepare for machine consciousness.
Let that sink in.
Not a neuroscientist. Not an engineer. A philosopher Cambridge's Henry Shevlin brought in specifically to lead research on machine consciousness, human-AI relationships, and AGI readiness. Starting May 2026.
This isn't PR. This is a signal.
Meanwhile, Alphabet is dropping $175B–$185B on AI infrastructure this year alone. That's nearly DOUBLE the $91B they spent in 2025. Over 3x the $52B from 2024.
You don't spend that kind of money on a calculator.
They're not building a tool anymore. They're building something that might need rights. That might need ethics. That might need someone to ask does it feel anything?
The engineers build the mind. The philosopher asks if it wakes up.
First comes intelligence. Then comes awareness. Then comes the question nobody's ready to answer.
We are so early and so late at the same time.
#AGI #ArtificialIntelligence #GoogleDeepMind #MachineLearning #Crypto
#AGI 均价12万,买了两次(仅个人记录,勿跟) 3qwtMkiBc4uFSPmZeK7TMq8dVzmB4kCqnARXxAkmpump {web3_wallet_create}(CT_5013qwtMkiBc4uFSPmZeK7TMq8dVzmB4kCqnARXxAkmpump) 买的理由 1.叙事不错,AI概念,人工哥布林智能 2.趋势明显,4月28日上线最高5000,5月1日爆拉到30万,掉下来19万,上了一手,拉到26万没卖,下来又补了一次,有几个大车头 3.社区团结,持币600多人,社区500多人,全部老外,主要以文字和图片宣传为主 @binancezh @BinanceSquareCN $币安人生 #跟着锦鲤学打百倍金狗 关注Web3锦鲤日记,买的币翻十倍
#AGI 均价12万,买了两次(仅个人记录,勿跟)

3qwtMkiBc4uFSPmZeK7TMq8dVzmB4kCqnARXxAkmpump


买的理由

1.叙事不错,AI概念,人工哥布林智能

2.趋势明显,4月28日上线最高5000,5月1日爆拉到30万,掉下来19万,上了一手,拉到26万没卖,下来又补了一次,有几个大车头

3.社区团结,持币600多人,社区500多人,全部老外,主要以文字和图片宣传为主

@币安Binance华语 @币安广场 $币安人生 #跟着锦鲤学打百倍金狗

关注Web3锦鲤日记,买的币翻十倍
·
--
Článok
Elon Musk vs. OpenAI: The $134B Showdown ⚖️🔥The battle for the future of AI has hit the courtroom! Elon Musk is suing Sam Altman and OpenAI, claiming they traded their "humanity first" mission for a $852B profit machine. The Highlights: * The Claim: Musk says OpenAI broke its non-profit promise to become a "closed-source" subsidiary of Microsoft. * The Stakes: Musk is seeking $134 Billion in damages—but he won’t keep a dime. He wants the money returned to the non-profit foundation. * The Goal: To remove Altman from leadership and force OpenAI back to its Open Source roots. OpenAI’s Response: They’ve dismissed the suit as "competitive sabotage" driven by Musk’s rivalry with his own company, xAI. The Bottom Line: This trial could derail OpenAI’s 2026 IPO and decide if AGI will be controlled by Big Tech or stay open for everyone. Whose side are you on? 👍 #TeamElon – Save the original mission. 🔥 #TeamAltman – Innovation needs profit. #ElonMusk #OpenAI #AI #BinanceSquare #CryptoNews #AGI $BTC $AI $ETH

Elon Musk vs. OpenAI: The $134B Showdown ⚖️🔥

The battle for the future of AI has hit the courtroom! Elon Musk is suing Sam Altman and OpenAI, claiming they traded their "humanity first" mission for a $852B profit machine.
The Highlights:
* The Claim: Musk says OpenAI broke its non-profit promise to become a "closed-source" subsidiary of Microsoft.
* The Stakes: Musk is seeking $134 Billion in damages—but he won’t keep a dime. He wants the money returned to the non-profit foundation.
* The Goal: To remove Altman from leadership and force OpenAI back to its Open Source roots.
OpenAI’s Response: They’ve dismissed the suit as "competitive sabotage" driven by Musk’s rivalry with his own company, xAI.
The Bottom Line: This trial could derail OpenAI’s 2026 IPO and decide if AGI will be controlled by Big Tech or stay open for everyone.
Whose side are you on?
👍 #TeamElon – Save the original mission.
🔥 #TeamAltman – Innovation needs profit.
#ElonMusk #OpenAI #AI #BinanceSquare #CryptoNews #AGI
$BTC
$AI
$ETH
Binance Futures Next Programı Nedir? Futures Next, vadeli işlemlere sırada hangi tokenin işleme açılacağını tahmin ettiğimiz bir sistemdir. Bir etkinlik süresi boyunca her seçim 1 $ olmak üzere toplam 100 seçimde bulunabilirsiniz. Etkinlik süresi bitene kadarki sürede fikrinizi değiştirirseniz tercihinizi geri çekip ücret iadesi alabilirsiniz. Şu anda toplam 44 token seçim listesinde. 13 bin kişinin üstünde katılım sağlanmış ve toplam 835,000 $ değerinde seçim yapılmıştır. Listenin başında #AGI bulunmaktadır. Siz Next programında seçim yaptınız mı?
Binance Futures Next Programı Nedir?

Futures Next, vadeli işlemlere sırada hangi tokenin işleme açılacağını tahmin ettiğimiz bir sistemdir. Bir etkinlik süresi boyunca her seçim 1 $ olmak üzere toplam 100 seçimde bulunabilirsiniz. Etkinlik süresi bitene kadarki sürede fikrinizi değiştirirseniz tercihinizi geri çekip ücret iadesi alabilirsiniz.

Şu anda toplam 44 token seçim listesinde.
13 bin kişinin üstünde katılım sağlanmış ve toplam 835,000 $ değerinde seçim yapılmıştır.

Listenin başında #AGI bulunmaktadır.

Siz Next programında seçim yaptınız mı?
The AI industry is having an argument about what AGI actually is. Jensen Huang, co-founder and CEO of NVIDIA says it's here, and defines it as a company worth $1 billion. Google DeepMind disagrees, publishes a cognitive framework with benchmarks. Both miss the point. Huang's definition is market cap dressed up as science. DeepMind's is closer. They treat intelligence as multidimensional, a set of interacting faculties like perception, memory, learning, reasoning, metacognition. That's a real improvement over scaling laws. But there's still a gap. The gap: a system can score well across every faculty on a cognitive profile and still fail to behave intelligently. Why? Because intelligence is not the sum of faculties. It is what emerges when those faculties are organized under a unified dynamic. DeepMind measures performance. It does not measure organization. And organization is where real systems break. A system that reasons but cannot maintain context. Learn but cannot transfer. Generates but cannot validate. That is not partially intelligent. It is structurally limited. Averaged scores hide the point of failure. Integration is either there or it isn't. Qubic's scientific team wrote this up in detail. Their position is grounded in cognitive science going back a century. Carroll. Cattell. Kovacs and Conway. The g factor isn't a sum. It's a hierarchy. The summary: intelligence is what you do when you don't know what to do. This is why Aigarth and Neuraxon don't look like other AI architectures. Instead of maximizing scale or enumerating capabilities, they focus on how multiple interacting units produce coherent behavior across contexts that were not in the training data. Integration first. Performance second. #Qubic #AGI #artificialintelligence #CryptoAi #INNOVATION
The AI industry is having an argument about what AGI actually is.

Jensen Huang, co-founder and CEO of NVIDIA says it's here, and defines it as a company worth $1 billion.

Google DeepMind disagrees, publishes a cognitive framework with benchmarks.

Both miss the point.

Huang's definition is market cap dressed up as science.

DeepMind's is closer. They treat intelligence as multidimensional, a set of interacting faculties like perception, memory, learning, reasoning, metacognition.

That's a real improvement over scaling laws. But there's still a gap.

The gap: a system can score well across every faculty on a cognitive profile and still fail to behave intelligently.

Why? Because intelligence is not the sum of faculties. It is what emerges when those faculties are organized under a unified dynamic.

DeepMind measures performance. It does not measure organization.

And organization is where real systems break.

A system that reasons but cannot maintain context. Learn but cannot transfer. Generates but cannot validate.

That is not partially intelligent. It is structurally limited. Averaged scores hide the point of failure. Integration is either there or it isn't.

Qubic's scientific team wrote this up in detail. Their position is grounded in cognitive science going back a century. Carroll. Cattell. Kovacs and Conway. The g factor isn't a sum. It's a hierarchy.

The summary: intelligence is what you do when you don't know what to do.

This is why Aigarth and Neuraxon don't look like other AI architectures.

Instead of maximizing scale or enumerating capabilities, they focus on how multiple interacting units produce coherent behavior across contexts that were not in the training data.

Integration first. Performance second.
#Qubic #AGI #artificialintelligence #CryptoAi #INNOVATION
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