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Jul 14, 2023

Genetic Origins of Learning and Memory Traced Back 650 Million Years

Posted by in categories: computing, genetics, neuroscience

Summary: Researchers have uncovered genes essential for learning, memory, aggression, and other complex behaviors originated around 650 million years ago.

The study utilized computational methods to trace the evolutionary history of these genes involved in the production, modulation, and reception of monoamines like serotonin, dopamine, and adrenaline. This discovery suggests that this new method of modulating neuronal circuits could have played a role in the Cambrian Explosion, contributing to the diversification of life.

The finding offers new research avenues to understand the origins of complex behaviors and their relation to diverse processes like reward, addiction, aggression, feeding, and sleep.

Jul 14, 2023

A ‘Frustration Machine’ Found a Brand-New Phase of Matter

Posted by in category: quantum physics

As scientists explore the quantum world, the known number of phases of matter continues to grow. The newest addition to the list is a chiral bose-liquid state.

Jul 14, 2023

History of Generative AI. Paper explained

Posted by in categories: information science, robotics/AI

Generative AI techniques like ChatGPT, DALL-e and Codex can generate digital content such as images, text, and the code. Recent progress in large-scale AI models has improved generative AI’s ability to understand intent and generate more realistic content. This text summarizes the history of generative models and components, recent advances in AI-generated content for text, images, and across modalities, as well as remaining challenges.

In recent years, Artificial Intelligence Generated Content (AIGC) has gained much attention beyond the computer science community, where the whole society is interested in the various content generation products built by large tech companies. Technically, AIGC refers to, given human instructions which could help teach and guide the model to complete the task, using Generative AI algorithms to form a content that satisfies the instruction. This generation process usually comprises two steps: extracting intent information from human instructions and generating content according to the extracted intentions.

Generative models have a long history of AI, dating to the 1950s. Early models like Hidden Markov Models and Gaussian Mixture Models generated simple data. Generative models saw major improvements in deep learning. In NLP, traditional sentence generation used N-gram language models, but these struggled with long sentences. Recurrent neural networks and Gated Recurrent Units enabled modeling longer dependencies, handling ~200 tokens. In CV, pre-deep learning image generation used hand-designed features with limited complexity and diversity. Generative Adversarial Networks and Variational Autoencoders enabled impressive image generation. Advances in generative models followed different paths but converged with transformers, introduced for NLP in 2017. Transformers dominate many generative models across domains. In NLP, large language models like BERT and GPT use transformers. In CV, Vision Transformers and Swin Transformers combine transformers and visual components for images.

Jul 14, 2023

A ferroelectric transistor that stores and computes at scale

Posted by in categories: computing, information science

The Big Data revolution has strained the capabilities of state-of-the-art electronic hardware, challenging engineers to rethink almost every aspect of the microchip. With ever more enormous data sets to store, search and analyze at increasing levels of complexity, these devices must become smaller, faster and more energy efficient to keep up with the pace of data innovation.

Ferroelectric field effect transistors (FE-FETs) are among the most intriguing answers to this challenge. Like traditional silicon-based transistors, FE-FETs are switches, turning on and off at incredible speed to communicate the 1s and 0s computers use to perform their operations.

But FE-FETs have an additional function that conventional transistors do not: their ferroelectric properties allow them to hold on to .

Jul 14, 2023

Super Intelligent AI: 10 Capabilities It Will Have

Posted by in categories: augmented reality, bioengineering, business, genetics, robotics/AI, transhumanism

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3o_wqZx94Bc

This video explores Super Intelligent AIs and the capabilities they will have. Watch this next video called Super Intelligent AI: 10 Ways It Will Change The World: https://youtu.be/cVjq53TKKUU.
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Jul 14, 2023

Super Intelligent AI: 10 Scientific Discoveries It Will Make

Posted by in categories: augmented reality, bioengineering, business, genetics, robotics/AI, transhumanism

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zFbMJ-2QpG8

This video explores Super Intelligent AI and 10 scientific discoveries it could make. Watch this next video called Super Intelligent AI: 10 Ways It Will Change The World: https://youtu.be/cVjq53TKKUU.
► My Business Ideas Generation Book: https://bit.ly/3NDpPDI
► Udacity: Up To 75% Off All Courses (Biggest Discount Ever): https://bit.ly/3j9pIRZ
► Jasper AI: Write 5x Faster With Artificial Intelligence: https://bit.ly/3MIPSYp.

SOURCES:
https://www.britannica.com/science/tachyon.
https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/qm-manyworlds/#:~:text=Th…ion%20(MWI, and%20thus%20from%20all%20physics.

Continue reading “Super Intelligent AI: 10 Scientific Discoveries It Will Make” »

Jul 14, 2023

Team unveils new path for dense photonic integration

Posted by in categories: computing, quantum physics

Integrated optical semiconductor (hereinafter referred to as optical semiconductor) technology is a next-generation technology for which many researches and investments are being made worldwide because it can make complex optical systems such as LiDAR and quantum sensors and computers into a single small chip.

In existing , the goal was to achieve units of 5 or 2 nanometers, but increasing the degree of integration in optical semiconductor devices can be said to be a key technology that determines performance, price, and .

A research team led by Professor Sangsik Kim of the Department of Electrical and Electronic Engineering discovered a new optical coupling mechanism that can increase the degree of integration of optical semiconductor devices by more than 100 times.

Jul 14, 2023

Extreme measuring device can bring quantum technology to your smartphone

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, mobile phones, quantum physics

University of Copenhagen researchers have invented a “quantum drum” that can measure pressure, a gas leak, heat, magnetism and a host of other things with extreme precision. It can even scan the shape of a single virus. The invention has now been adapted to work at room temperature and may be finding its way into our phones.

Humans have tried to measure the world around them since ancient times. Now, researchers are using the laws of quantum physics to develop one of the most sensitive measuring devices the world has ever seen. One day, it may even be yours. With two innovative solutions, researchers at the Niels Bohr Institute have found a way to get quantum technology into our pockets.

The heart of the apparatus could be called a “quantum drum”: It is a that vibrates like a drum skin, but with so small an amplitude that the laws of quantum physics are needed to describe what’s happening. In other words, it’s vibrating really fast. This means the drum can be used as an ultra-precise measuring device—a quantum supersensor.

Jul 14, 2023

Striking SAG Actors in Disbelief Over Studios’ Dystopian AI Proposal

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

During SAG-AFTRA negotiations, the studios allegedly demanded the ability to use AI on background actors for a day rate, owning their image forever.

Jul 14, 2023

Scientists map single-cell spatial distribution atlas of macaque cortex

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, chemistry, neuroscience

A team of nearly 100 scientists recently mapped the cell-type taxonomy in the macaque cortex and revealed the relationship between cell-type composition and various primate brain regions by using the self-developed spatial transcriptome sequencing technology Stereo-seq and snRNA-seq technology, which provides a molecular and cellular basis for further investigation into neural circuits.

The study was published in Cell.

Primates have a vast number of neurons that form complex and intricate supporting advanced cognition and behavior. Disruptions in these cells and circuits can lead to various brain disorders. Understanding the composition and of cells in the brain, as well as the relationships between them, is a fundamental question in neuroscience, comparable to the in chemistry, the world map in geographic discoveries, or the DNA base sequence discovered through sequencing.