OpenAI Claims ChatGPT Rivals Human Experts in 44 Professions
OpenAI's GPT-5 matches or exceeds expert quality in 40.6% of 1,320 real-world tasks across 44 occupations, marking rapid AI progress since GPT-4o's 13.7% score.
- OpenAI released a new evaluation called GDPval to measure AI performance on real-world tasks across 44 jobs, providing a clearer picture of how AI can impact economic productivity in various industries.
- Early results from GDPval indicated that leading AI models perform close to industry experts, with Claude Opus 4.1 rated the best compared to GPT-5.
- OpenAI acknowledges that while AI can increase efficiency, it cannot completely replace human workers, emphasizing AI's role in supporting tasks.
- The evaluation aims to provide evidence-based insights into AI's capabilities in the workplace, helping track improvements over time.
47 Articles
47 Articles
OpenAI Releases List of Work Tasks It Says ChatGPT Can Already Replace
ChatGPT maker OpenAI has released a new evaluation, dubbed GDPval, to measure how well its AIs perform on “economically valuable, real-world tasks across 44 occupations.” “People often speculate about AI’s broader impact on society, but the clearest way to understand its potential is by looking at what models are already capable of doing,” the company wrote in an accompanying blog post. “Evaluations like GDPval help ground conversations about fu…
Critical Analysis: The Fundamental Flaws in OpenAI's GDPval Evaluation Framework
This paper critically examines OpenAI’s recently introduced GDPval benchmark, which claims to measure large language model performance on “real-world economically valuable tasks.” While GDPval positions itself as an advance beyond academic benchmarks, our analysis identifies fundamental methodological flaws that distort the complexity and value of knowledge work.
OpenAI claims AI is making coding jobs better, not worse. Is it true?
The meteoric rise in artificial intelligence and its usage in nearly every facet of our daily life is leaving a profound mark on the job market. In the first quarter of 2025 alone, more than 76,000 jobs were lost to automation, as AI-powered analytics platforms replaced junior data analysts. Nearly 40% of employers expect to cut staff in areas where AI can handle tasks, according to the World Economic Forum’s Future of Jobs Report 2025. Now, wi…
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