Talk Date and Time: June 27, 2024 at 6:30 pm - 7:15 pm EST followed by 15 minutes on Google Meet
Topic: How to Strategize Human Content Creation in the Era of GenAI?
Abstract:
Generative AI (GenAI) will have significant impact on content creation platforms. In this paper, we study the dynamic competition between a GenAI and a human contributor. Unlike the human, the GenAI's content only improves when more contents are created by human over the time; however, GenAI has the advantage of generating content at a lower cost. We study the algorithmic problem in this dynamic competition model about how the human contributor can maximize her utility when competing against the GenAI for content generation over a set of topics. In time-sensitive content domains (e.g., news or pop music creation) where contents' value diminishes over time, we show that there is no polynomial time algorithm for finding the human's optimal (dynamic) strategy, unless the randomized exponential time hypothesis is false. Fortunately, we are able to design a polynomial time algorithm that naturally cycles between myopically optimizing over a short time window and pausing and provably guarantees an approximation ratio of 0.5. We then turn to time-insensitive content domains where contents do not lose their value (e.g., contents on history facts). Interestingly, we show that this setting permits a polynomial time algorithm that maximizes the human's utility in the long run.
Paper Link: https://arxiv.org/abs/2406.05187
Bio:
Seyed A. Esmaeili is a Postdoc at the Data Science Institute at the University of Chicago where he is hosted by Haifeng Xu. Previously, he was a Postdoc at the Simons Laufer Mathematical Sciences Institute at Berkeley where he was affiliated with the algorithms, fairness, and equity program. Before that he was a PhD student at the University of Maryland, College Park. His broad research interests are in the interaction between algorithms, data and individuals and society. More concretely, his work revolves around machine learning, fairness, and game theory. His awards include multiple fellowships from the University of Maryland.