When researchers at Microsoft released a list of the 40 jobs most likely to be affected by generative artificial intelligence (gen AI), few outsiders would have expected to see “mathematician” among them. Yet according to speakers at this year’s Heidelberg Laureate Forum (HLF), which connects early-career researchers with distinguished figures in mathematics and computer science, computers are already taking over many tasks formerly performed by human mathematicians – and the humans have mixed feelings about it.

One of those expressing disquiet is Yang-Hui He, a mathematical physicist at the London Institute for Mathematical Sciences. In general, He is extremely keen on AI. He’s written a textbook about the use of AI in mathematics, and he told the audience at an HLF panel discussion that he’s been peddling machine-learning techniques to his mathematical physics colleagues since 2017.

More recently, though, He has developed concerns about gen AI specifically. “It is doing mathematics so well without any understanding of mathematics,” he said, a note of wonder creeping into his voice. Then, more plaintively, he added, “Where is our place?”

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