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May 12, 2024

Meta Just Achieved Mind-Reading Using AI

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, information science, robotics/AI

ALGORITHMS THAT DECODE IMAGES A PERSON SEES OR IMAGINES will enable visual representations of dreams a sleeper is having, and give deeper insights into emotionally disturbed or mentally ill patients.


Go to a href= https://brilliant.org/coldfusion

May 12, 2024

Adam Dorr Warns Tesla Bot and Humanoids Bigger Than Fire (Tony Seba ReThinkX)

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

The rapid development and deployment of humanoid robots in the global labor market is inevitable and offers significant advantages over human labor, leading to a race to adopt this technology as quickly as possible Questions to inspire discussion What are the advantages of humanoid robots over human labor? —Humanoid ro.

May 12, 2024

GM Energy Powered a Mansion with an Electric Silverado Using V2H

Posted by in category: energy

You can run your house for a week on a high-capacity EV battery. To prove it, GM Energy deliberately cut power to an event showing off its bi-directional V2H.

May 12, 2024

Stellantis is about to test the first-ever production-line lithium-sulfur batteries

Posted by in categories: innovation, transportation

In a milestone, supermaterials trailblazer Lyten has shipped lithium-sulfur (Li-S) batteries to Stellantis and other US and EU OEMs for testing.

Lyten’s shipment of A samples of its 6.5 Ah Li-S pouch cells is the first major step in the commercial evaluation of lithium-sulfur batteries by leading US and European automakers. Stellantis announced that it had invested in Lyten’s lithium-sulfur battery development in May 2023.

“This milestone is the result of years of dedicated work and innovation from the Lyten team, and we are just at the start of further expanding the capabilities of our lithium-sulfur battery cells,” said Lyten CEO and cofounder Dan Cook.

May 12, 2024

Tesla is about to remove steering wheel nag with new Full Self-Driving update

Posted by in categories: Elon Musk, robotics/AI, transportation

Tesla is planning to remove the steering wheel nag, which alerts drivers to apply torque on the steering wheel, with a new Supervised Full Self-Driving (FSD) update coming next week.

Yesterday, we reported on CEO Elon Musk giving an outline of the upcoming FSD software updates.

The CEO says that Tesla is preparing to launch fully retrained models in FSD v12.4 as soon as next week.

May 12, 2024

In the rush to adopt AI, ethics and responsibility are taking a backseat at many companies

Posted by in categories: ethics, robotics/AI

ChatGPT sparked a generative AI frenzy in the corporate workplace. Efforts to implement that technology responsibly, however, haven’t kept up.

May 12, 2024

Scientists develop breakthrough gel material that could remove one of the most common pollutants — here’s how it works

Posted by in categories: particle physics, sustainability

Researchers have developed a revolutionary material that can help eliminate microplastics, one of the most pervasive artificial contaminants in nature, from our waterways.

Scientists at the Indian Institute of Science have created a sustainable hydrogel — a polymer-based material that can adapt its structure to its environment even after absorbing water — with a “unique intertwined polymer network” that binds the microplastics and breaks them down using UV light, the institute summarized on its website.

Continue reading “Scientists develop breakthrough gel material that could remove one of the most common pollutants — here’s how it works” »

May 12, 2024

Why AI playing video games is a big deal

Posted by in categories: entertainment, food, robotics/AI, sustainability

The lab’s latest AI news is something different, though. Instead of designing a model to master a single game, DeepMind has teamed up with researchers from the University of British Columbia to develop an AI agent capable of playing a whole bunch of totally different games.

Called SIMA (scalable i nstructable m ulti-world a gent), the project also marks a shift from competitive to cooperative play as the AI operates by following human instructions.

But SIMA wasn’t created simply to help sleepy players grind out levels or farm up resources. The researchers instead hope that by better understanding how SIMA learns in these virtual playgrounds, we can make AI agents more cooperative and helpful in the real world.

May 12, 2024

AI and Physics Combine to Reveal the 3D Structure of a Flare Erupting around a Black Hole

Posted by in categories: cosmology, physics, robotics/AI

Scientists believe the environment immediately surrounding a black hole is tumultuous, featuring hot magnetized gas that spirals in a disk at tremendous speeds and temperatures. Astronomical observations show that within such a disk, mysterious flares occur up to several times a day, temporarily brightening and then fading away.

Now a team led by Caltech scientists has used telescope data and an artificial intelligence (AI) computer-vision technique to recover the first three-dimensional video showing what such flares could look like around SagittariusA* (Sgr A the supermassive black hole at the heart of our own Milky Way galaxy.

The 3D flare structure features two bright, compact features located about 75 million kilometers (or half the distance between Earth and the sun) from the center of the black hole. It is based on data collected by the Atacama Large Millimeter Array (ALMA) in Chile over a period of 100 minutes directly after an eruption seen in Xray data on April 11, 2017.

May 12, 2024

Signs of Multiple Sclerosis show up in Blood Years Before Symptoms, study finds

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, neuroscience

In a discovery that could hasten treatment for patients with multiple sclerosis (MS), UC San Francisco scientists have discovered a harbinger in the blood of some people who later went on to develop the disease.

In about 1 in 10 cases of MS, the body begins producing a distinctive set of antibodies against its own proteins years before symptoms emerge. These autoantibodies appear to bind to both human cells and common pathogens, possibly explaining the immune attacks on the brain and spinal cord that are the hallmark of MS.

The findings were published in Nature Medicine on April 19.

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