Australian scientists have developed a new AI tool to help identify skulls from crime scenes and mass casualty events.
An interview with Karl Friston, a computational psychiatrist and an architect of an AI developed to emulate natural intelligence using active inference, physics and fuzzy logic.
Anima Anandkumar is using AI to help solve the world’s challenges faster. She has used the technology to speed up prediction ...
Curate your BRAIN for synergy with AI: hone self-awareness, purpose, emotional depth, curiosity, and social bonds. It’s time ...
SYDNEY, Feb. 10, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- Nuix Ltd. (ASX: NXL), a global leader in data processing, investigative analytics and ...
Like LLMs, SLMs are capable of processing and generating human language and both are trained on massive quantities of text-based data – the same basic rules apply to the creation of large/small image ...
Essential vocabulary to understand emergence of AI With global leaders set to attend a summit on artificial intelligence (AI) in Paris on February 10-11, here are some of the key concepts in the field ...
An AI system developed by Google DeepMind, Google's premiere AI research lab, has surpassed the average gold medalist in ...
AI can deliver huge benefits to chemistry, but some also worry about the turbulence it might bring to the job market ...
Bob Dylan famously asked, “How many roads must a man walk down, before you can call him a man?”. The power of the question is ...
Many people think of psychology as being primarily about mental health, but its story goes far beyond that. As the science of ...
One of the most agonizing experiences a cancer patient suffers is waiting without knowing: waiting for a diagnosis, waiting ...