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Dec 17, 2024

Multi-Agent Collaboration: The Future of Problem Solving with GenAI

Posted by in categories: innovation, robotics/AI

The field of artificial intelligence (AI) has witnessed extraordinary advancements in recent years, ranging from natural language processing breakthroughs to the development of sophisticated robotics. Among these innovations, multi-agent systems (MAS) have emerged as a transformative approach for solving problems that single agents struggle to address. Multi-agent collaboration harnesses the power of interactions between autonomous entities, or “agents,” to achieve shared or individual objectives. In this article, we explore one specific and impactful technique within multi-agent collaboration: role-based collaboration enhanced by prompt engineering. This approach has proven particularly effective in practical applications, such as developing a software application.

Dec 17, 2024

Ways to Deal With Hallucinations in LLM

Posted by in categories: business, robotics/AI

Originally published on Towards AI.

One of the major challenges in using LLMs in business is that LLMs hallucinate. How can you entrust your clients to a chatbot that can go mad and tell them something inappropriate at any moment? Or how can you trust your corporate AI assistant if it makes things up randomly?

That’s a problem, especially given that an LLM can’t be fired or held accountable.

Dec 17, 2024

Glowing Plants and Silk-Coated Seeds: How MIT Is Developing the Future of Farming

Posted by in categories: chemistry, climatology, sustainability

Researchers at MIT are developing innovative agricultural technologies such as stress-signaling plants, microbial fertilizers, and protective seed coatings to adapt farming to climate change and enhance food security.

With global temperatures on the rise, agricultural practices must adapt to new challenges. Climate change is expected to increase the frequency of droughts, and some land may no longer be arable. Additionally, it is becoming increasingly difficult to feed an ever-growing population without expanding the production of fertilizer and other agrochemicals, which have a large carbon footprint that is contributing to global warming.

Continue reading “Glowing Plants and Silk-Coated Seeds: How MIT Is Developing the Future of Farming” »

Dec 17, 2024

How the internet changed news, according to The Onion

Posted by in category: internet

Freethink spoke to Onion staffers about parodying news from the print era into the digital age.

Dec 17, 2024

C. elegans study reveals hidden mechanism of swallowing

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

A research team led by Professor Kim Kyuhyung at the Department of Brain Sciences, DGIST, has discovered a new principle that regulates how food moves through the digestive tract and is swallowed. They found that the Piezo channel proteins sense the pressure generated when food accumulates at the front of the digestive tract, triggering swallowing behavior.

This discovery is expected to provide important clues in developing treatments for digestive and eating disorders. The work is published in the journal Nature Communications.

When we eat, the digestive tract generates various signals that can be linked to important physiological processes. However, our understanding of how the movement and accumulation of food in the digestive tract are sensed and processed to regulate important behaviors like swallowing remains limited.

Dec 17, 2024

Origin Of The Genetic Code — Study

Posted by in categories: evolution, genetics

Eddie Gonzales Jr. – AncientPages.comDespite awe-inspiring diversity, nearly every lifeform – from bacteria to blue whales – shares the same genetic code. How and when this code came about has been the subject of much scientific controversy.

Image credit: Adobe Stock – Diatomic

Taking a fresh approach at an old problem, Sawsan Wehbi, a doctoral student in the Genetics Graduate Interdisciplinary Program at the University of Arizona, discovered strong evidence that the textbook version of how the universal genetic code evolved needs revision. Wehbi is the first author of a study published in the journal PNAS suggesting the order with which amino acids – the code’s building blocks – were recruited is at odds with what is widely considered the “consensus” of genetic code evolution.

Dec 17, 2024

Scientists Say They’ve Discovered the Shape of Individual Photons

Posted by in category: particle physics

We now have a new idea of what photons look like from a model that predicts how these particles of light interact with their environment.

Dec 17, 2024

Revolutionary AI Model Deciphers Language of Plants for the First Time

Posted by in categories: food, genetics, robotics/AI

PlantRNA-FM, an AI model trained on RNA data from over 1,100 plants, decodes genetic patterns to advance plant science, improve crops, and tackle global agricultural challenges.

A groundbreaking Artificial Intelligence (AI) model designed to decode the sequences and structural patterns that form the genetic “language” of plants has been launched by a research collaboration.

Named Plant RNA-FM, this innovative model is the first of its kind and was developed by a partnership between plant researchers at the John Innes Centre and computer scientists at the University of Exeter.

Dec 17, 2024

Breathing coordinates brain rhythms for memory consolidation during sleep

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, neuroscience

Just as a conductor coordinates different instruments in an orchestra to produce a symphony, breathing coordinates hippocampal brain waves to strengthen memory while we sleep, reports a new Northwestern Medicine study.

This is the first time breathing rhythms during sleep have been linked to these hippocampal brain waves—called slow waves, spindles and ripples—in humans. Scientists knew these waves were linked to memory but their underlying driver was unknown. The study is published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

“To strengthen memories, three special neural oscillations emerge and synchronize in the hippocampus during sleep, but they were thought to come and go at random times,” said senior study author Christina Zelano, professor of neurology at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine. “We discovered that they are coordinated by breathing rhythms.”

Dec 17, 2024

Harnessing spin: New electrocatalysts could transform hydrogen production efficiency

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, health

Nearly a quarter of Portuguese adults have allergies that cause a runny nose. This respiratory disease, formally called allergic rhinitis and frequently associated with asthma, is a common problem around the world, and the upper airway is a key target for research into the underlying disease processes.

Now a global team of researchers has discovered that patients with allergy-induced sniffles and asthma have different fungal colonies or mycobiomes in their noses, suggesting potential lines of inquiry for future treatments.

“We showed that samples displayed a significantly higher fungal diversity and a different fungal community structure compared to those of healthy controls,” said Dr. Luís Delgado of the University of Porto, Portugal, one of the authors of the article in Frontiers in Microbiology. “This may suggest that allergic rhinitis increases the diversity and changes the composition of the upper airway’s microbiome.”

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