If I understand correctly part of the explanation is that when they're flying horizontally they need to compensate for gravity by pushing up, kind of like what planes do. If you put them in a place where there's no gravity with a light floating in the middle of a room they'd orbit the light while also getting closer as they're trying to compensate for gravity, and when you put gravity back I guess that produces the weird orbiting we observe.
Haven't seen flying insects since last summer but if I think they kind of lose altitude the closer they get to the light source, which would be when their torso is less horizontally oriented.
Also this is just a guess but I imagine the closer they're to the light source and the larger the contrast between bright and dark is, the stronger is their tendency to get locked into the orbiting path as opposed to flying randomly.
But how are system messages given to GPT, are there any other lower level prompts? This may be outdated but last I remember ChatGPT is just GPT with a prompt like
The following is a chat between an AI and a user:
- AI: How can I help?
- User: ...
At least that's how I simulated chats on the OpenAI playground before ChatGPT.
Is this done differently now, or if not I wonder if anyone has been able to guess what that prompt says and how the system message gets inserted.
Haven't seen flying insects since last summer but if I think they kind of lose altitude the closer they get to the light source, which would be when their torso is less horizontally oriented.
Also this is just a guess but I imagine the closer they're to the light source and the larger the contrast between bright and dark is, the stronger is their tendency to get locked into the orbiting path as opposed to flying randomly.