Anecdotal evidence: At MIT, we received ~5x the number of applications for AI safety programming compared to EA programming, despite similar levels of outreach last year. This ratio was even higher when just considering applicants with relevant backgrounds and accomplishments. Around two dozen winners and top performers of international competitions (math/CS/science olympiads, research competitions) and students with significant research experience engaged with AI alignment programming, but very few engaged with EA programming.
Dunno what the exact ratio would look like (since the different groups run somewhat different kinds of events), but we’ve definitely seen a lot of interest in AIS at Carnegie Mellon as well. There’s also not very much overlap between the people who come to AIS things and those who come to EA things.
Dunno what the exact ratio would look like (since the different groups run somewhat different kinds of events), but we’ve definitely seen a lot of interest in AIS at Carnegie Mellon as well. There’s also not very much overlap between the people who come to AIS things and those who come to EA things.