Google Research suggests AI models like DeepSeek exhibit collective intelligence patterns
AI models are now holding meetings in their own heads
Reuters
It turns out that when the smartest AI models “think,” they might actually be hosting a heated internal debate. A fascinating new study co-authored by researchers at Google has thrown a wrench into how we traditionally understand artificial intelligence. It suggests that advanced reasoning models – specifically DeepSeek-R1 and Alibaba’s QwQ-32B – aren’t just crunching numbers in a straight, logical line. Instead, they appear to be behaving surprisingly like a group of humans trying to solve a puzzle together.
The paper, published on arXiv with the evocative title Reasoning Models Generate Societies of Thought, posits that these models don’t merely compute; they implicitly simulate a “multi-agent” interaction. Imagine a boardroom full of experts tossing ideas around, challenging each other’s assumptions, and looking at a problem from different angles before finally agreeing on the best answer. That is essentially what is happening inside the code. The researchers found that these models exhibit “perspective diversity,” meaning they generate conflicting viewpoints and work to resolve them internally, much like a team of colleagues debating a strategy to find the best path forward.
For years, the dominant assumption in Silicon Valley was that making AI smarter was simply a matter of making it bigger
Feeding it more data and throwing more raw computing power at the problem. But this research flips that script entirely. It suggests that the structure of the thinking process matters just as much as the scale.
These models are effective because they organize their internal processes to allow for “perspective shifts.” It is like having a built-in devil’s advocate that forces the AI to check its own work, ask clarifying questions, and explore alternatives before spitting out a response.
For everyday users, this shift is massive
We have all experienced AI that gives flat, confident, but ultimately wrong answers. A model that operates like a “society” is less likely to make those stumbling errors because it has already stress-tested its own logic. It means the next generation of tools won’t just be faster; they will be more nuanced, better at handling ambiguous questions, and arguably more “human” in how they approach complex, messy problems. It could even help with the bias problem – if the AI considers multiple viewpoints internally, it is less likely to get stuck in a single, flawed mode of thinking.
Ultimately, this moves us away from the idea of AI as just a glorified calculator and toward a future where systems are designed with organized internal diversity. If Google’s findings hold true, the future of AI isn’t just about building a bigger brain – it’s about building a better, more collaborative team inside the machine. The concept of “collective intelligence” is no longer just for biology; it might be the blueprint for the next great leap in technology.
Moinak Pal is has been working in the technology sector covering both consumer centric tech and automotive technology for the…
Microsoft tells you to uninstall the latest Windows 11 update
Microsoft says uninstall the January 2026 security update after POP email bugs and system issues surface.
Microsoft has issued an unusual public advisory telling users to uninstall the Windows 11 January 2026 security update (KB5074109) after widespread reports that it is causing serious system and application issues. The update, which began rolling out automatically on January 13 and advances affected systems to OS Build 26200.7623 or similar releases, has been linked to problems including Outlook Classic freezing, black screens, and app crashes.
Outlook is not working.
KB5074109 This is the cause.
Microsoft, do something about it.#Microsoft— 喘息登山者 (@hapico0109) January 20, 2026
You could see faster AMD Ryzen AI Max chips soon
New leaks suggest Ryzen AI Max 400 “Gorgon Halo” could land with slicker performance.
AMD appears to be working on a refreshed version of its Ryzen AI MAX 400 family, codenamed “Gorgon Halo”. According to recent leaks by VideoCardz, this next-gen refresh targets faster performance for Ryzen-powered machines, especially those focused on AI workloads and integrated graphics.
The rumored Gorgon Halo series would essentially be a clock-bumped iteration of the current Strix Halo-branded processors, with the same core counts but higher boost speeds on both the CPU and Radeon iGPU sides. Additionally, it’ll also add support for faster LPDDR5X-8533 memory to further improve responsiveness and performance under AI-heavy workloads.
Adobe Acrobat now lets you edit PDFs by chatting with its AI Assistant
No need to dig through menus to find the right tool.
Alongside new AI-powered features that turn PDFs into podcasts and presentations, Adobe’s latest Acrobat update introduces a handy conversational editing tool. Similar to the document editing capabilities Anthropic added to its Claude chatbot last year, Acrobat’s AI Assistant now lets users perform essential PDF tasks using natural-language prompts.
Adobe says that the chat-based AI in Acrobat now offers a smarter and faster way to edit PDFs. Users can remove pages, text, comments, and images, add e-signatures and passwords, and handle other tasks simply by chatting with the AI. Instead of digging through menus or remembering where specific tools live, users can simply type what they want done and let the AI handle the edit.
