Search:
Match:
2 results

Analysis

This paper investigates the trainability of the Quantum Approximate Optimization Algorithm (QAOA) for the MaxCut problem. It demonstrates that QAOA suffers from barren plateaus (regions where the loss function is nearly flat) for a vast majority of weighted and unweighted graphs, making training intractable. This is a significant finding because it highlights a fundamental limitation of QAOA for a common optimization problem. The paper provides a new algorithm to analyze the Dynamical Lie Algebra (DLA), a key indicator of trainability, which allows for faster analysis of graph instances. The results suggest that QAOA's performance may be severely limited in practical applications.
Reference

The paper shows that the DLA dimension grows as $Θ(4^n)$ for weighted graphs (with continuous weight distributions) and almost all unweighted graphs, implying barren plateaus.

Research#llm📝 BlogAnalyzed: Dec 27, 2025 22:02

What if AI plateaus somewhere terrible?

Published:Dec 27, 2025 21:39
1 min read
r/singularity

Analysis

This article from r/singularity presents a compelling, albeit pessimistic, scenario regarding the future of AI. It argues that AI might not reach the utopian heights of ASI or simply be overhyped autocomplete, but instead plateau at a level capable of automating a significant portion of white-collar work without solving major global challenges. This "mediocre plateau" could lead to increased inequality, corporate profits, and government control, all while avoiding a crisis point that would spark significant resistance. The author questions the technical feasibility of such a plateau and the motivations behind optimistic AI predictions, prompting a discussion about potential responses to this scenario.
Reference

AI that's powerful enough to automate like 20-30% of white-collar work - juniors, creatives, analysts, clerical roles - but not powerful enough to actually solve the hard problems.