News (898)
Firm Designs AI City
According to Dezeen, a Danish architecture firm is working up plans for an AI operated city campus for tech company Terminus.
Danish architecture studio BIG has designed Terminus AI City Operating System as a campus in Chongqing, China, that will be operated by an artificial intelligence system.
Read more...Using Humans to Train AI
According to Tech Explore, Facebook has developed a new AI benchmarking program that includes humans interacting with the AI.
Advances in artificial intelligence depend on continual testing of massive amounts of data. This benchmark testing allows researchers to determine how "intelligent" AI is, spot weaknesses and then develop stronger, smarter models.
Read more...AI Can Detect Lonliness
Artificial intelligence can be used to predict loneliness in older adults, reports Medical Express.
For the past couple of decades, there has been a loneliness pandemic, marked by rising rates of suicides and opioid use, lost productivity, increased health care costs and rising mortality. The COVID-19 pandemic, with its associated social distancing and lockdowns, have only made things worse, say experts.
Read more...AI Can Relate Image Descriptions to Pictures
Artificial intelligence is training on text and images and may soon be able to caption pictures correctly, reports on MIT Technology Review.
Of all the AI models in the world, OpenAI’s GPT-3 has most captured the public’s imagination. It can spew poems, short stories, and songs with little prompting, and has been demonstrated to fool people into thinking its outputs were written by a human. But its eloquence is more of a parlor trick, not to be confused with real intelligence.
Read more...Convincing Public AI is Safe
Organizations need to convince the public that artificial intelligence is safe, reports Information Week.
Security and privacy concerns are the top barriers to adoption of artificial intelligence, and for good reason. Both benign and malicious actors can threaten the performance, fairness, security and privacy of AI models and data.
Read more...Peer Reviewed by Artificial Intelligence
Artificial intelligence could help peer review research, reports Medical Express.
As the COVID-19 pandemic has swept the world, researchers have published hundreds of papers each week reporting their findings—many of which have not undergone a thorough peer review process to gauge their reliability.
Read more...Guidelines for AI Could Be Doomed to Fail
According to MIT Technology Review, global guidelines for AI need to account for cultural and regional contexts.
International organizations and corporations are racing to develop global guidelines for the ethical use of artificial intelligence. Declarations, manifestos, and recommendations are flooding the internet. But these efforts will be futile if they fail to account for the cultural and regional contexts in which AI operates.
Read more...AI Can Help Determine Drug Side Effects
Scientists are using algorithms to determine drug side effects, reports Tech Explorer.
A new algorithm has been developed by academics at Royal Holloway, University of London, to predict the side effects of drugs before they hit the market by using the same principle by which movies are recommended to users.
Read more...Pentagon Plans F-16 Man vs AI in 2024
According to the Washington Times, the Pentagon is planning to have a real time match between a human F-16 pilot and an AI pilot in 2024.
The Pentagon is planning a 2024 showdown between an F-16 piloted by a human and one controlled by artificial intelligence, a man versus machine matchup that military officials believe could represent a key turning point in technological development.
Read more...Bringing Beauty Back to Chess
A chess master is teaming up with DeepMind to make chess beautiful again, reports Wired.
Chess has a reputation for cold logic, but Vladimir Kramnik loves the game for its beauty.
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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