Jump to content

Alec Radford

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Alec Radford is an American artificial intelligence researcher.

Biography

[edit]

Radford grew up in Texas.[1] He graduated from Cistercian Preparatory School in 2011,[2] where he became an Eagle Scout,[3] and dropped out of Olin College in August 2014, where he and fellow students Slater Victoroff, Diana Yuan, and Madison May had formed the startup Indico in their dorm room. In 2015, the quartet were joined by Luke Metz[1] and the firm and the Facebook AI research lab in New York used generative adversarial networks to create realistic low pixel images.[4] A demonstration of Indico's technology was used without proper attribution in an April 2016 demonstration by Nvidia chief executive Jensen Huang.[1]

Radford joined OpenAI around 2016,[5] where he worked on natural-language processing. The following year, Radford trained a neural network on Amazon reviews. The model was fairly basic, with layers which allowed for human understanding. Upon exploring it, he saw that it had a special neuron linked to the sentiment of the reviews, which it had created on its own. This was a drastic improvement from previous neural networks that had analysed sentiment, because they had to be told to do so and specially trained on data that was explicitly labeled according to sentiment. This development made OpenAI chief scientist Ilya Sutskever consider that a future model, using more diverse language data, could map far more structures of meaning, eventually becoming a "learned core module" for superintelligence.[6]

In 2018, Radford was the lead author on OpenAI's seminal research paper on generative pre-trained transformers, which form the foundation of ChatGPT.[5] At OpenAI, he worked on early GPT models, Whisper, a speech recognition model, and the image generator DALL-E. He left OpenAI in December 2024 to pursue independent research.[5] Around March 2025, Radford joined Thinking Machines Lab as an advisor. He joined along with Bob McGrew who was previously the chief research officer of OpenAI.[7]

In April 2026, Radford, Nick Levine, and David Duvenaud released Talkie, an AI model trained on books, newspapers, scientific journals, patents, and case law published before December 31, 1930. When asked about the state of the world in 2026, it stated that one billion people would live in Europe, that London and New York would be connected by steamships that transit between the two in ten days, and "winter will be passed in Paris, and the summer in London."[8]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c Pressman, Aaron (June 10, 2023). "How a couple of Olin College students helped spark the AI chatbot revolution". Boston Globe.
  2. ^ Fleck, Deborah (May 1, 2012). "Cistercian Preparatory School's literary magazine won Gold Crown Award". Dallas News.
  3. ^ "At Cistercian Preparatory School, Eagle Scout tradition thrives". Dallas News. December 14, 2010.
  4. ^ "Computers learn to create photos of bedrooms and faces on demand". New Scientist.
  5. ^ a b c Woo, Erin; Palazzolo, Stephanie (December 19, 2024). "Senior OpenAI Researcher Radford Departs". The Information. Retrieved July 13, 2025.
  6. ^ Andersen, Ross (July 24, 2023). "Does Sam Altman Know What He's Creating?" – via The Atlantic.
  7. ^ Wiggers, Kyle (April 8, 2025). "Mira Murati's AI startup gains prominent ex-OpenAI advisers". TechCrunch.
  8. ^ https://the-decoder.com/here-is-what-an-llm-that-knows-nothing-after-1930-thinks-our-world-looks-like-in-2026/