Millions of people are now designing their own personalized artificial intelligence companions, yet most have little idea how those creations will actually behave. In a new paper, MIT Media Lab Assistant Professor Pat Pataranutaporn and his graduate student researchers Anthony Baez and Sheer Karny introduce “neural transparency,” a tool that lets everyday users glimpse inside an AI’s neural network before their chatbot ever says a word. The work is being presented this week at the ACM Conference on Intelligent User Interfaces (IUI 2026), held in Cyprus.
Q&A: Neural transparency and the future of AI design
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