From ChatGPT to Gemini, this year was dominated by large language models and other AIs becoming everyday tools used by millions of people.
By Alex Wilkins
From ChatGPT to Gemini, this year was dominated by large language models and other AIs becoming everyday tools used by millions of people.
By Alex Wilkins
The company announces its latest huge chip — but will now focus on developing smaller chips with a fresh approach to ‘error correction’
The second-largest quantum computing chip won’t be fitted into IBM’s next-generation System Two quantum computer. Instead, it will use three smaller 133-qubit chips with a much lower error rate.
Addiction, Cannabis, Mental Health — December 17, 2023.
Posted in futurism
Differences in information transmission in the brain network between humans and other species are not well understood. Here, the authors apply an information theory approach to structural connectomes and functional MRI and report that human brain networks display more evidence of parallel information transmission compared to macaques and mice.
Plus: a marketing group says it can listen to consumer conversations through their phones.
Quantum physics is fundamentally weird, so much so that we need thought experiments of hidden cats in boxes and metaphors of spinning coins to even begin to comprehend its laws.
Yet even in our classical world, where physics is more intuitive, shades of quantum behavior can be represented using relatively simple scenarios.
Researchers experimenting with tiny droplets of oil running down two adjacent channels in a bath of vibrating fluid have discovered that the behavior of the droplets matches up with a famous quantum thought experiment.
By combining photonic and electronic components, scientists have built a prototype communications chip that can effectively access high enough radio frequency bandwidths for uses including advanced radar as well as 6G and 7G.
Japanese scientists said they have succeeded in creating the world’s first mental images of objects and landscapes from human brain activity by using artificial intelligence technology.
The team of scientists from the National Institutes for Quantum Science and Technology, another national institute and Osaka University was able to produce rough images of a leopard, with a recognizable mouth, ears and spotted pattern, as well as objects like an airplane with red lights on its wings.
The technology, dubbed “brain decoding,” enables the visualization of perceptual contents based on brain activity and could be applied to the medical and welfare fields.
Recent research suggests that guayusa tea and lion’s mane supplements could help enhance mood and boost a person’s cognitive performance.