LLM

See also: LL.M. and L.L.M.

English

Noun

LLM (plural LLMs)

  1. (education, law) Alternative form of LL.M. (Master of Laws)
  2. (machine learning) Initialism of large language model.
    • 2022 April 15, Steven Johnson, Nikita Iziev, “A.I. Is Mastering Language. Should We Trust What It Says?”, in The New York Times, →ISSN:
      Some skeptics argue that the software is capable only of blind mimicry — that it’s imitating the syntactic patterns of human language but is incapable of generating its own ideas or making complex decisions, a fundamental limitation that will keep the L.L.M. approach from ever maturing into anything resembling human intelligence.
    • 2022, Hendrik Kempt, Synthetic Friends: A Philosophy of Human-Machine Friendship, Springer Nature, →ISBN, page 22:
      Currently, large language models (LLM) are the base model for creating more specific natural language producers, like chatbots or personal assistants. BERT, GPT-3, and other LLM can be used to program all kinds of “semantic machines”, to create machines for almost any kind of linguistic purpose.
  3. (machine learning) Initialism of logic learning machine.
  4. Initialism of local linear model.

Anagrams

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