combinations. i would like you to right the word wish. done. reporter: his reading scores have risen some 60% and he s now at grade level. i like reading because because that s my thing. i like reading comic books, regular books and hard books, but not have a lot of words. probably when i m 13 i could read those big books. reporter: with new skills has come new confidence. his excitement for school is phenomenal. he loves to come to school. as he s reading he s able to decode words, right, and i m like how did you know that? he says, oh, i know. he will say, mommy, i can do that. i learned this in school. reporter: city officials say 51% of new york elementary students are not reading proficiently and the problem is worse for children of color with 63% of latino students and 64%
and, therefore, that takes some credibility away from the case that jack smith has brought. is that going to change? i don t know. what i will tell you, chris, and i think i said on your show, the gentleman i spoke to, and i said is there anything donald trump could do that would lose your support, and he said no because there s nothing that i m going to hear in the media or wherever that i ll believe. i know what i believe. a friend of mine today i was talking said, look, if i walk two or three blocks down the street to a guy repairing cars, he doesn t care what the new york times thinks or the wall street journal or anybody else. he has his view. the more the elites attack trump, the more he likes trump. that s kind of what we re dealing with. the question gets to be what do we as a country do to get people out of their silos. if we understand why some of these people still defend him and we have a better chance of being able to decode what the
my head and know what i m thinking? currently we are very far from that! that might also might never be possible. we can t completely rule it out, but as far as we know, that certainly won t be possible in the next few decades. the real potential application of this is actually helping people who are unable to speak without them needing to get neurosurgery. now we have this not shot of the brain. jerry telling explains how the u.s. open a isd tp large model to help decode the brain. the gpt wattle is made up of millions of pages of text from the internet that the a i trained on, and learns how sentences are constructed and how people talk and think. gpt basically made our predictions a lot better. but it doesn t just work listening to audio. professor who showed us what happens when you watch as a movie with no sound while his brain was scant. watch as the technology is able to decode what his eyes are seeing. she then took my hand and held it to her lips. she kissed it
the real potential application of this is actually helping people who are unable to speak without them needing to get neuro surgery. now we have this snapshot of the brain. reporter: jerry tang explained how they used open ai s chatgpt model to uncode the plain. it is made up of multiple pages of text from the internet that the ai trains on and learns how sentences are constructed and how people talk or think. gpt made our predictions a lot better. reporter: but it doesn t just work listening to audio. professor hoot showed us what happened when he watched a movie with no sound. watch as the technology is able to decode with his eyes are saying. she took my hand and held it to her lips, she kissed it, i smiled and she pulled me in for a hug. i got her back for about hours, i had to stop the bleeding and gave her my shirt to put over it.