Right now the technology is prone to so many errors. It can not really replicate human empathy well in my opinion. There are other reasons well and perhaps I can make a future video
I think AI will reach a point that therapists are not as essential for folks who need basic validation and coping skills. For those of us in private practice, we will have to be excellent in our craft, brand, etc to stand out. In other words, I believe therapy will stick around, but the “generalists” might get pushed out.
Ai is really annoying when it comes to work, especially in other fields such as art and design. And I've noticed people being able to call themselves an "artist" as they simply type down words and press 'enter' just seems baseless compared to real hard-working artists.
I do think it is interesting, though I am not worried about ChatGPT taking over. I'm all for humor in therapy but thought her voice and manner was obnoxious.
@@matthewryanLCSW The day that an AI replaces a real human being at being a therapist, is the day AI acquires cognition. Its' own sense of self. Currently, what we have is zombie intelligence. It does not think. It was taught on a very large quantity of data, what the right response is, what the wrong response is, etc. The "I" does not exist, within chatgpt. There is no self at its' core. It's just an algorithm that spits out the best response based on its' training data. The thing is, the day AI acquires a "self", is the day it replaces every job on the planet. But job displacement will be the least of our worries at that point.
Hi thanks for the video! Can you share a bit more about why you think it would not replace therapist?
Right now the technology is prone to so many errors. It can not really replicate human empathy well in my opinion. There are other reasons well and perhaps I can make a future video
I think it’ll definitely replace all the mediocre therapists who don’t have a niche!
Someone down below @colubridking shared the same sentiment
I think AI will reach a point that therapists are not as essential for folks who need basic validation and coping skills. For those of us in private practice, we will have to be excellent in our craft, brand, etc to stand out.
In other words, I believe therapy will stick around, but the “generalists” might get pushed out.
Thanks for sharing this. I do agree that these AI models might become very good at generalists practices across the board
It’s going to happen 😢
I hope not!
Ai is really annoying when it comes to work, especially in other fields such as art and design. And I've noticed people being able to call themselves an "artist" as they simply type down words and press 'enter' just seems baseless compared to real hard-working artists.
Yes I agree with this totally. If people do decide to use it for that purpose it may not be accurate to then call yourself an artist.
I do think it is interesting, though I am not worried about ChatGPT taking over. I'm all for humor in therapy but thought her voice and manner was obnoxious.
LOL. Yea not everyone loves the voice and tone. I am glad your not worries. I don't think Chat is taking over anytime soon. Quite impressive though
ChatGPT 4o? No. AI at one point? Yes.
Interesting, I a don't know enough about the different models to judge which one will eventually do it
@@matthewryanLCSW The day that an AI replaces a real human being at being a therapist, is the day AI acquires cognition. Its' own sense of self. Currently, what we have is zombie intelligence. It does not think. It was taught on a very large quantity of data, what the right response is, what the wrong response is, etc. The "I" does not exist, within chatgpt. There is no self at its' core. It's just an algorithm that spits out the best response based on its' training data.
The thing is, the day AI acquires a "self", is the day it replaces every job on the planet. But job displacement will be the least of our worries at that point.
@@lennypinskiy6598 Amazing perspective. Thank you.