OpenAI CEO Sam Altman has praised Indian prodigy Prafulla Dhariwal, crediting him for the launch of the company's recently-launched flagship aritificial intelligence AI model, GPT-4o. Dhariwal is a research scientist at the company, for his crucial role in the development of GPT-4o. Altman highlighted that the creation of GPT-4o, a modified iteration of the ChatGPT-4 model and the backbone of OpenAI's flagship product, was driven by Dhariwal's "vision, talent, conviction, and determination."


Also read: Google Pixel 8a Review: Excellent Mid-Ranger With Flagship Features


"GPT-4o would not have happened without the vision, talent, conviction, and determination of @prafdhar over a long period of time. that (along with the work of many others) led to what I hope will turn out to be a revolution in how we use computers," Altman posted on X, formerly Twitter.






Dhariwal leads the Omni team at OpenAI, with GPT-4o representing the company's first venture into natively multimodal models.


Also read: Amazfit Bip 5 Unity Smartwatch Launching In India On May 19. Expected Features, Specifications, More


Who Is Prafulla Dhariwal


Dhariwal joined OpenAI as a research intern in May 2016 and quickly rose through the ranks to become a research scientist. Dhariwal is credited as one of the co-creators of GPT-3, as well as contributing to the development of DALL-E 2, a text-to-image platform, the music generator Jukebox, and the reversible generative model Glow.


Prafulla Dhariwal received the National Talent Search Scholarship from the Government of India in 2009 and won a gold medal at the International Astronomy Olympiad in China. He also secured gold medals at both the International Mathematical Olympiad and the International Physics Olympiad in 2012 and 2013, respectively, and was awarded the annual Abasaheb Naravane Memorial Prize in 2013.


In addition to his other accomplishments, Dhariwal has an outstanding academic record. He scored 295 out of 300 in the physics-chemistry-mathematics (PCM) group in his Class XII exams, the media has reported.