News (898)
AI Helps Find Rare Earth Compounds
Artificial intelligence can help researchers find new rare earth compounds, reports Phys.org.
Artificial intelligence advances how scientists explore materials. Researchers from Ames Laboratory and Texas A&M University trained a machine-learning (ML) model to assess the stability of rare-earth compounds.
Read more...How AI is Used Skews Opinions
How Americans view artificial intelligence depends on how they currently use it, reports NPR.
In recent years, the proliferation of artificial intelligence has given the world technology like Siri, Netflix recommendations and chat customer support. But a new survey shows Americans are still torn about how it may continue to impact society.
Read more...AI Creates Lethal Chemicals
According to the Verge, artificial intelligence invented 40,000 potentially lethal molecules in just six hours.
It took less than six hours for drug-developing AI to invent 40,000 potentially lethal molecules. Researchers put AI normally used to search for helpful drugs into a kind of “bad actor” mode to show how easily it could be abused at a biological arms control conference.
Read more...AI and Document Processing
According to Freightwaves, artificial intelligence could help with document processing.
Late last year, ABBYY teamed up with FreightWaves to survey logistics providers about document handling and processing habits. While results showed that most companies across the supply chain are making efforts toward document digitization and process automation, it was also clear that many companies continue to run into document verification hurdles on a regular basis.
Read more...Could Artificial Intelligence Help with the Great Reshuffle
Could the “Great Reshuffle” cause employers to rethink the use of artificial intelligence, reports Forbes.
The Great Reshuffle of the job market is about matching talent with opportunity in an organic way that level sets profitability and people sustainability. In this competitive labor environment, workers are empowered with the agency to own their success and call the shots
Read more...Transformers Changing Neural Networks
A new neural network, a transformer, could speed up how artificial intelligence learns, reports Quanta Magazine.
Imagine going to your local hardware store and seeing a new kind of hammer on the shelf. You’ve heard about this hammer: It pounds faster and more accurately than others, and in the last few years it’s rendered many other hammers obsolete, at least for most uses
Read more...Artificial Intelligence Being Used in War
According to Fortune, artificial intelligence is being used in the invasion of Ukraine.
War is terrible. But it has often played a pivotal role in advancing technology. And Russia’s invasion of Ukraine is shaping up to be a key proving ground for artificial intelligence, for ill and, perhaps in a few instances, for good, too.
Read more...Nuclear Fusion Could be Possible
Artificial intelligence is helping scientists one step closer to nuclear fusion, reports LiveScience.
The green energy revolution promised by nuclear fusion is now a step closer, thanks to the first successful use of a cutting-edge artificial intelligence system to shape the superheated hydrogen plasmas inside a fusion reactor.
Read more...Could AI Achieve Singularity
According to Discover Magazine, experts aren’t sure if artificial intelligence will ever achieve “singularity”.
It may sound like nothing more than a thrilling science fiction trope, but scientists who study artificial intelligence warn that AI singularity — a point when the technology irreversibly surpasses the capabilities of the human mind — is a real possibility, and some say it will happen within a few decades.
Read more...AI Can Hear Healthy Machines
According to Tech Explore, AI can listen for “healthy” machinery.
Sounds provide important information about how well a machine is running. ETH researchers have now developed a new machine learning method that automatically detects whether a machine is "healthy" or requires maintenance.
Read more...Most Read
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Oct 30 2018
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Written by Craig Gehrig
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Dec 16 2019
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Written by News
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Mar 17 2020
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Written by Deborah Huyett
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Jan 08 2019
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Written by Robert Agar
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