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Google, OpenAI earn gold at high school maths contest
Google, OpenAI earn gold at high school maths contest

Express Tribune

time2 hours ago

  • Science
  • Express Tribune

Google, OpenAI earn gold at high school maths contest

Alphabet's Google and OpenAI said their artificial-intelligence models won gold medals at a global mathematics competition, signaling a breakthrough in maths capabilities in the race to build powerful systems that can rival human intelligence, reported Reuters. The results marked the first time that AI systems crossed the gold-medal scoring threshold at the International Mathematical Olympiad for high-school students. Both companies' models solved five out of six problems, achieving the result using general-purpose "reasoning" models that processed mathematical concepts using natural language, in contrast to the previous approaches used by AI firms. The achievement suggests AI is less than a year away from being used by mathematicians to crack unsolved research problems at the frontier of the field, according to Junehyuk Jung, a math professor at Brown University and visiting researcher in Google's DeepMind AI unit. "I think the moment we can solve hard reasoning problems in natural language will enable the potential for collaboration between AI and mathematicians," Jung told Reuters. The same idea can apply to research quandaries in other fields such as physics, said Jung, who won an IMO gold medal as a student in 2003. Of the 630 students participating in the 66th IMO on the Sunshine Coast in Queensland, Australia, 67 contestants, or about 11 per cent, achieved gold-medal scores. Google's DeepMind AI unit last year achieved a silver medal score using AI systems specialised for maths. This year, Google used a general-purpose model called Gemini Deep Think, a version of which was previously unveiled at its annual developer conference in May. Unlike previous AI attempts that relied on formal languages and lengthy computation, Google's approach this year operated entirely in natural language and solved the problems within the official 4.5-hour time limit, the company said in a blog post. OpenAI, which has its own set of reasoning models, similarly built an experimental version for the competition, according to a post by researcher Alexander Wei on social media platform X. He noted that the company does not plan to release anything with this level of math capability for several months. This year marked the first time the competition coordinated officially with some AI developers, who have for years used prominent math competitions like IMO to test model capabilities. IMO judges certified the results of those companies, including Google, and asked them to publish results on July 28. "We respected the IMO Board's original request that all AI labs share their results only after the official results had been verified by independent experts and the students had rightly received the acclamation they deserved," Google DeepMind CEO Demis Hassabis said on X.

Google and OpenAI's AI models win milestone gold at global math competition
Google and OpenAI's AI models win milestone gold at global math competition

Time of India

time13 hours ago

  • Science
  • Time of India

Google and OpenAI's AI models win milestone gold at global math competition

Alphabet's Google and OpenAI said their artificial-intelligence models won gold medals at a global mathematics competition , signaling a breakthrough in math capabilities in the race to build powerful systems that can rival human intelligence. The results marked the first time that AI systems crossed the gold-medal scoring threshold at the International Mathematical Olympiad for high-school students. Both companies' models solved five out of six problems, achieving the result using general-purpose "reasoning" models that processed mathematical concepts using natural language, in contrast to the previous approaches used by AI firms. The achievement suggests AI is less than a year away from being used by mathematicians to crack unsolved research problems at the frontier of the field, according to Junehyuk Jung, a math professor at Brown University and visiting researcher in Google's DeepMind AI unit. "I think the moment we can solve hard reasoning problems in natural language will enable the potential for collaboration between AI and mathematicians," Jung told Reuters. OpenAI's breakthrough was achieved with a new experimental model centered on massively scaling up "test-time compute." This was done by both allowing the model to "think" for longer periods and deploying parallel computing power to run numerous lines of reasoning simultaneously, according to Noam Brown, researcher at OpenAI. Brown declined to say how much in computing power it cost OpenAI, but called it "very expensive." To OpenAI researchers, it is another clear sign that AI models can command extensive reasoning capabilities that could expand into other areas beyond math. The optimism is shared by Google researchers, who believe AI models' capabilities can apply to research quandaries in other fields such as physics, said Jung, who won an IMO gold medal as a student in 2003. Of the 630 students participating in the 66th IMO on the Sunshine Coast in Queensland, Australia, 67 contestants, or about 11 per cent, achieved gold-medal scores. Google's DeepMind AI unit last year achieved a silver medal score using AI systems specialised for math. This year, Google used a general-purpose model called Gemini Deep Think , a version of which was previously unveiled at its annual developer conference in May. Unlike previous AI attempts that relied on formal languages and lengthy computation, Google's approach this year operated entirely in natural language and solved the problems within the official 4.5-hour time limit, the company said in a blog post. OpenAI, which has its own set of reasoning models , similarly built an experimental version for the competition, according to a post by researcher Alexander Wei on social media platform X. He noted that the company does not plan to release anything with this level of math capability for several months. This year marked the first time the competition coordinated officially with some AI developers, who have for years used prominent math competitions like IMO to test model capabilities. IMO judges certified the results of those companies, including Google, and asked them to publish results on July 28. "We respected the IMO Board's original request that all AI labs share their results only after the official results had been verified by independent experts and the students had rightly received the acclamation they deserved," Google DeepMind CEO Demis Hassabis said on X on Monday. OpenAI, which published its results on Saturday and first claimed gold-medal status, said in an interview that it had permission from an IMO board member to do so after the closing ceremony on Saturday. The competition on Monday allowed cooperating companies to publish results, Gregor Dolinar, president of IMO's board, told Reuters.

Google, OpenAI's AI models claim gold at global math competition
Google, OpenAI's AI models claim gold at global math competition

Qatar Tribune

timea day ago

  • Business
  • Qatar Tribune

Google, OpenAI's AI models claim gold at global math competition

Agencies The unit of Alphabet's Google and OpenAI have both said their artificial intelligence models won gold medals at a global mathematics competition, signaling a breakthrough in math capabilities in the race to build systems that can rival human intelligence. The results marked the first time that AI systems crossed the gold-medal scoring threshold at the International Mathematical Olympiad (IMO) for high-school students. Both companies' models solved five out of six problems, achieving the result using general-purpose 'reasoning' models that processed mathematical concepts using natural language, in contrast to the previous approaches used by AI Google DeepMind worked with the IMO to have their models graded and certified by the committee, OpenAI did not officially enter the competition. The startup revealed their models have achieved a gold medal-worthy score on this year's questions on Saturday, citing grades by three external IMO medalists. The achievement suggests AI is less than a year away from being used by mathematicians to crack unsolved research problems at the frontier of the field, according to Junehyuk Jung, a math professor at Brown University and visiting researcher in Google's DeepMind AI unit. 'I think the moment we can solve hard reasoning problems in natural language will enable the potential for collaboration between AI and mathematicians,' Jung told Reuters. OpenAI's breakthrough was achieved with a new experimental model centered on massively scaling up 'test-time compute.' This was done by both allowing the model to 'think' for longer periods and deploying parallel computing power to run numerous lines of reasoning simultaneously, according to Noam Brown, researcher at OpenAI. Brown declined to say how much in computing power it cost OpenAI, but called it 'very expensive.' To OpenAI researchers, it is another clear sign that AI models can command extensive reasoning capabilities that could expand into other areas beyond math. The optimism is shared by Google researchers, who believe AI models' capabilities can apply to research quandaries in other fields such as physics, said Jung, who won an IMO gold medal as a student in the 630 students participating in the 66th IMO on the Sunshine Coast in Queensland, Australia, 67 contestants, or about 11%, achieved gold-medal scores. Google's DeepMind AI unit last year achieved a silver medal score using AI systems specialized for math. This year, Google used a general-purpose model called Gemini Deep Think, a version of which was previously unveiled at its annual developer conference in previous AI attempts that relied on formal languages and lengthy computation, Google's approach this year operated entirely in natural language and solved the problems within the official 4.5-hour time limit, the company said in a blog post. OpenAI, which has its own set of reasoning models, similarly built an experimental version for the competition, according to a post by researcher Alexander Wei on social media platform X. He noted that the company does not plan to release anything with this level of math capability for several months. This year marked the first time the competition coordinated officially with some AI developers, who have for years used prominent math competitions like IMO to test model capabilities.

OpenAI and Google both won gold at 2025 International Math Olympiad: Full story in 5 points
OpenAI and Google both won gold at 2025 International Math Olympiad: Full story in 5 points

India Today

time2 days ago

  • Business
  • India Today

OpenAI and Google both won gold at 2025 International Math Olympiad: Full story in 5 points

In a first for artificial intelligence, OpenAI and Google have announced that their AI models have scored gold medal-worthy results at the 2025 International Mathematical Olympiad (IMO), a prestigious global competition for high school students. The development is being seen as a landmark moment in the race to build AI systems that can reason like humans and solve complex academic Google won gold at 2025 International Math Olympiad: Full story in 5 points-OpenAI and Google used advanced reasoning-based AI models that worked through natural language rather than relying on traditional mathematical programming methods. Both companies' systems successfully solved five out of six problems, a score that crosses the threshold for a gold medal at the IMO. This is the first time any AI models have managed to reach that level of accuracy in the competition's history.-The 66th IMO was held on Australia's Sunshine Coast, with 630 student participants. Alongside them, Google's DeepMind AI unit officially took part with its "Gemini Deep Think" model, which had been introduced earlier at the company's I/O event in May. The model managed to work through all problems in the same 4.5-hour time frame given to human participants, using plain English to process and solve the questions. -On the other hand, OpenAI did not officially enter the contest but later shared that its own experimental model had achieved similar gold-level scores when given the same problems. OpenAI's scores were verified by three independent IMO medalists, according to the company. The model used a new method involving massively scaled-up "test-time compute", which essentially means the system was allowed to run longer and use greater computing power to think through multiple approaches in parallel. OpenAI researcher Noam Brown described the effort as computationally 'very expensive'.-While Google's DeepMind had its results verified and certified by the IMO's committee, OpenAI revealed its achievement after the official competition results were made public. Both companies respected the IMO board's condition to delay announcements until the student rankings had been confirmed.-The achievement has sparked optimism among researchers. Professor Junehyuk Jung from Brown University — himself a former IMO gold medalist — said that this progress shows how close AI is to playing a supporting role in solving high-level research problems in mathematics. According to Google, this breakthrough is not just about solving maths problems. It's about demonstrating that AI systems are now capable of applying logic and reasoning, not just in maths but potentially in fields like physics and theoretical computer science. While OpenAI confirmed it won't release such high-level mathematical tools to the public immediately, it hinted that the capabilities could soon extend beyond math.- Ends

Google clinches milestone gold at global math competition, while OpenAI also claims win
Google clinches milestone gold at global math competition, while OpenAI also claims win

Ammon

time2 days ago

  • Science
  • Ammon

Google clinches milestone gold at global math competition, while OpenAI also claims win

Ammon News - Alphabet's Google and OpenAI said their artificial-intelligence models won gold medals at a global mathematics competition, signaling a breakthrough in math capabilities in the race to build systems that can rival human intelligence. The results marked the first time that AI systems crossed the gold-medal scoring threshold at the International Mathematical Olympiad (IMO) for high-school students. Both companies' models solved five out of six problems, achieving the result using general-purpose "reasoning" models that processed mathematical concepts using natural language, in contrast to the previous approaches used by AI firms. While Google DeepMind worked with the IMO to have their models graded and certified by the committee, OpenAI did not officially enter the competition. The startup revealed their models have achieved a gold medal-worthy score on this year's questions on Saturday, citing grades by three external IMO medalists. The achievement suggests AI is less than a year away from being used by mathematicians to crack unsolved research problems at the frontier of the field, according to Junehyuk Jung, a math professor at Brown University and visiting researcher in Google's DeepMind AI unit. Reuters

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