#223 – Neel Nanda on leading a Google DeepMind team at 26 – and advice if you want to work at an AI company (part 2)

#223 – Neel Nanda on leading a Google DeepMind team at 26 – and advice if you want to work at an AI company (part 2)

At 26, Neel Nanda leads an AI safety team at Google DeepMind, has published dozens of influential papers, and mentored 50 junior researchers — seven of whom now work at major AI companies. His secret? “It’s mostly luck,” he says, but “another part is what I think of as maximising my luck surface area.”

Video, full transcript, and links to learn more: https://80k.info/nn2

This means creating as many opportunities as possible for surprisingly good things to happen:

  • Write publicly.
  • Reach out to researchers whose work you admire.
  • Say yes to unusual projects that seem a little scary.

Nanda’s own path illustrates this perfectly. He started a challenge to write one blog post per day for a month to overcome perfectionist paralysis. Those posts helped seed the field of mechanistic interpretability and, incidentally, led to meeting his partner of four years.

His YouTube channel features unedited three-hour videos of him reading through famous papers and sharing thoughts. One has 30,000 views. “People were into it,” he shrugs.

Most remarkably, he ended up running DeepMind’s mechanistic interpretability team. He’d joined expecting to be an individual contributor, but when the team lead stepped down, he stepped up despite having no management experience. “I did not know if I was going to be good at this. I think it’s gone reasonably well.”

His core lesson: “You can just do things.” This sounds trite but is a useful reminder all the same. Doing things is a skill that improves with practice. Most people overestimate the risks and underestimate their ability to recover from failures. And as Neel explains, junior researchers today have a superpower previous generations lacked: large language models that can dramatically accelerate learning and research.

In this extended conversation, Neel and host Rob Wiblin discuss all that and some other hot takes from Neel's four years at Google DeepMind. (And be sure to check out part one of Rob and Neel’s conversation!)


What did you think of the episode? https://forms.gle/6binZivKmjjiHU6dA

Chapters:

  • Cold open (00:00:00)
  • Who’s Neel Nanda? (00:01:12)
  • Luck surface area and making the right opportunities (00:01:46)
  • Writing cold emails that aren't insta-deleted (00:03:50)
  • How Neel uses LLMs to get much more done (00:09:08)
  • “If your safety work doesn't advance capabilities, it's probably bad safety work” (00:23:22)
  • Why Neel refuses to share his p(doom) (00:27:22)
  • How Neel went from the couch to an alignment rocketship (00:31:24)
  • Navigating towards impact at a frontier AI company (00:39:24)
  • How does impact differ inside and outside frontier companies? (00:49:56)
  • Is a special skill set needed to guide large companies? (00:56:06)
  • The benefit of risk frameworks: early preparation (01:00:05)
  • Should people work at the safest or most reckless company? (01:05:21)
  • Advice for getting hired by a frontier AI company (01:08:40)
  • What makes for a good ML researcher? (01:12:57)
  • Three stages of the research process (01:19:40)
  • How do supervisors actually add value? (01:31:53)
  • An AI PhD – with these timelines?! (01:34:11)
  • Is career advice generalisable, or does everyone get the advice they don't need? (01:40:52)
  • Remember: You can just do things (01:43:51)

This episode was recorded on July 21.

Video editing: Simon Monsour and Luke Monsour
Audio engineering: Ben Cordell, Milo McGuire, Simon Monsour, and Dominic Armstrong
Music: Ben Cordell
Camera operator: Jeremy Chevillotte
Coordination, transcriptions, and web: Katy Moore

Jaksot(317)

#138 Classic episode – Sharon Hewitt Rawlette on why pleasure and pain are the only things that intrinsically matter

#138 Classic episode – Sharon Hewitt Rawlette on why pleasure and pain are the only things that intrinsically matter

What in the world is intrinsically good — good in itself even if it has no other effects? Over the millennia, people have offered many answers: joy, justice, equality, accomplishment, loving god, wisd...

22 Tammi 20252h 25min

#134 Classic episode – Ian Morris on what big-picture history teaches us

#134 Classic episode – Ian Morris on what big-picture history teaches us

Wind back 1,000 years and the moral landscape looks very different to today. Most farming societies thought slavery was natural and unobjectionable, premarital sex was an abomination, women should obe...

15 Tammi 20253h 40min

#140 Classic episode – Bear Braumoeller on the case that war isn’t in decline

#140 Classic episode – Bear Braumoeller on the case that war isn’t in decline

Is war in long-term decline? Steven Pinker's The Better Angels of Our Nature brought this previously obscure academic question to the centre of public debate, and pointed to rates of death in war to a...

8 Tammi 20252h 48min

2024 Highlightapalooza! (The best of The 80,000 Hours Podcast this year)

2024 Highlightapalooza! (The best of The 80,000 Hours Podcast this year)

"A shameless recycling of existing content to drive additional audience engagement on the cheap… or the single best, most valuable, and most insight-dense episode we put out in the entire year, depend...

27 Joulu 20242h 50min

#211 – Sam Bowman on why housing still isn't fixed and what would actually work

#211 – Sam Bowman on why housing still isn't fixed and what would actually work

Rich countries seem to find it harder and harder to do anything that creates some losers. People who don’t want houses, offices, power stations, trains, subway stations (or whatever) built in their ar...

19 Joulu 20243h 25min

#210 – Cameron Meyer Shorb on dismantling the myth that we can’t do anything to help wild animals

#210 – Cameron Meyer Shorb on dismantling the myth that we can’t do anything to help wild animals

"I really don’t want to give the impression that I think it is easy to make predictable, controlled, safe interventions in wild systems where there are many species interacting. I don’t think it’s eas...

29 Marras 20243h 21min

#209 – Rose Chan Loui on OpenAI’s gambit to ditch its nonprofit

#209 – Rose Chan Loui on OpenAI’s gambit to ditch its nonprofit

One OpenAI critic calls it “the theft of at least the millennium and quite possibly all of human history.” Are they right?Back in 2015 OpenAI was but a humble nonprofit. That nonprofit started a for-p...

27 Marras 20241h 22min

#208 – Elizabeth Cox on the case that TV shows, movies, and novels can improve the world

#208 – Elizabeth Cox on the case that TV shows, movies, and novels can improve the world

"I think stories are the way we shift the Overton window — so widen the range of things that are acceptable for policy and palatable to the public. Almost by definition, a lot of things that are going...

21 Marras 20242h 22min

Suosittua kategoriassa Koulutus

rss-murhan-anatomia
psykopodiaa-podcast
voi-hyvin-meditaatiot-2
rss-valo-minussa-2
rss-narsisti
adhd-podi
rss-niinku-asia-on
psykologia
aamukahvilla
aloita-meditaatio
rss-duodecim-lehti
rahapuhetta
kesken
salainen-paivakirja
rss-elamankoulu
rss-liian-kuuma-peruna
rss-psykalab
rss-selvat-savelet
rss-vapaudu-voimaasi
ihminen-tavattavissa-tommy-hellsten-instituutti