Month: July 2023

  • A better way to study ocean currents | MIT News

    A better way to study ocean currents | MIT News

    [ad_1] To study ocean currents, scientists release GPS-tagged buoys in the ocean and record their velocities to reconstruct the currents that transport them. These buoy data are also used to identify “divergences,” which are areas where water rises up from below the surface or sinks beneath it. By accurately predicting currents and pinpointing divergences, scientists…

  • An AI challenge only humans can solve | MIT News

    An AI challenge only humans can solve | MIT News

    [ad_1] The Dark Ages were not entirely dark. Advances in agriculture and building technology increased Medieval wealth and led to a wave of cathedral construction in Europe. However, it was a time of profound inequality. Elites captured virtually all economic gains. In Britain, as Canterbury Cathedral soared upward, peasants had no net increase in wealth…

  • Is medicine ready for AI? Doctors, computer scientists, and policymakers are cautiously optimistic | MIT News

    Is medicine ready for AI? Doctors, computer scientists, and policymakers are cautiously optimistic | MIT News

    [ad_1] The advent of generative artificial intelligence models like ChatGPT has prompted renewed calls for AI in health care, and its support base only appears to be broadening. The second annual MIT-MGB AI Cures Conference, hosted on April 24 by the Abdul Latif Jameel Clinic for Machine Learning in Health (Jameel Clinic), saw its attendance…

  • Using data to write songs for progress | MIT News

    Using data to write songs for progress | MIT News

    [ad_1] A three-year recipient of MIT’s Emerson Classical Vocal Scholarships, senior Ananya Gurumurthy recalls getting ready to step onto the Carnegie Hall stage to sing a Mozart opera that she once sang with the New York All-State Choir. The choir conductor reminded her to articulate her words and to engage her diaphragm. “If you don’t…

  • Researchers use AI to identify similar materials in images | MIT News

    Researchers use AI to identify similar materials in images | MIT News

    [ad_1] A robot manipulating objects while, say, working in a kitchen, will benefit from understanding which items are composed of the same materials. With this knowledge, the robot would know to exert a similar amount of force whether it picks up a small pat of butter from a shadowy corner of the counter or an…

  • Probabilistic AI that knows how well it’s working | MIT News

    Probabilistic AI that knows how well it’s working | MIT News

    [ad_1] Despite their enormous size and power, today’s artificial intelligence systems routinely fail to distinguish between hallucination and reality. Autonomous driving systems can fail to perceive pedestrians and emergency vehicles right in front of them, with fatal consequences. Conversational AI systems confidently make up facts and, after training via reinforcement learning, often fail to give…

  • Using AI, scientists find a drug that could combat drug-resistant infections | MIT News

    Using AI, scientists find a drug that could combat drug-resistant infections | MIT News

    [ad_1] Using an artificial intelligence algorithm, researchers at MIT and McMaster University have identified a new antibiotic that can kill a type of bacteria that is responsible for many drug-resistant infections. If developed for use in patients, the drug could help to combat Acinetobacter baumannii, a species of bacteria that is often found in hospitals…

  • Celebrating the impact of IDSS | MIT News

    Celebrating the impact of IDSS | MIT News

    [ad_1] The “interdisciplinary approach” is something that has been lauded for decades for its ability to break down silos and create new integrated approaches to research. For Munther Dahleh, founding director of the MIT Institute for Data, Systems, and Society (IDSS), showing the community that data science and statistics can transcend individual disciplines and form…

  • XPENG Unleashes G6 Coupe SUV for Mainstream Market

    XPENG Unleashes G6 Coupe SUV for Mainstream Market

    [ad_1] China electric vehicle maker XPENG Motors has announced its new G6 coupe SUV — featuring an NVIDIA-powered intelligent advanced driver assistance system — is now available to the China market. The G6 is XPENG’s first model featuring the company’s proprietary Smart Electric Platform Architecture (SEPA) 2.0, which aims to reduce development and manufacturing costs…

  • NVIDIA CEO, European Generative AI Execs Discuss Keys to Success

    NVIDIA CEO, European Generative AI Execs Discuss Keys to Success

    [ad_1] Three leading European generative AI startups joined NVIDIA founder and CEO Jensen Huang this week to talk about the new era of computing. More than 500 developers, researchers, entrepreneurs and executives from across Europe and further afield packed into the Spindler and Klatt, a sleek, riverside gathering spot in Berlin. Huang started the reception…