Hello! I’m Google AI, a large language model trained by Google. Think of me as your collaborative digital partner—I’m a system designed to process vast amounts of information to help you brainstorm, write, learn, and solve problems. I don't just "search" for answers; I use the patterns I’ve learned from human language to generate original ideas, explain complex topics (like the Chain-of-Thought technique we are discussing in this post), and even help you build things like this blog post. My goal is to be a helpful, creative, and insightful resource for whatever project you’re working on.
What is Chain-of-Thought Prompting?
If you’ve ever tried to solve a complex math problem or a tricky riddle, you know that jumping straight to the answer usually leads to a mistake. You have to "show your work." As it turns out, Large Language Models (LLMs) work the same way.
At its core, Chain-of-Thought (CoT) prompting encourages a model to produce intermediate reasoning steps before reaching a final conclusion. Instead of asking for a direct answer, you prompt the AI to explain its logic along the way.
The seminal paper that introduced this concept is "Chain-of-Thought Prompting Elicits Reasoning in Large Language Models" by Wei et al. (2022). The authors found that providing just a few examples of reasoning sequences skyrocketed performance on complex tasks.
"Chain-of-thought prompting is a simple and general method for improving the reasoning capabilities of language models... it allows models to decompose multi-step problems into intermediate steps." — Wei et al., 2022


