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Apr 15, 2024

How Spotify AI plans to know what’s going on inside your head to help you find new music

Posted by in categories: habitats, information science, media & arts, robotics/AI

The streaming audio giant’s suite of recommendation tools has grown over the years: Spotify Home feed, Discover Weekly, Blend, Daylist, and Made for You Mixes. And in recent years, there have been signs that it is working. According to data released by Spotify at its 2022 Investor Day, artist discoveries every month on Spotify had reached 22 billion, up from 10 billion in 2018, “and we’re nowhere near done,” the company stated at that time.

Over the past decade or more, Spotify has been investing in AI and, in particular, in machine learning. Its recently launched AI DJ may be its biggest bet yet that technology will allow subscribers to better personalize listening sessions and discover new music. The AI DJ mimics the vibe of radio by announcing the names of songs and lead-in to tracks, something aimed in part to help ease listeners into extending out of their comfort zones. An existing pain point for AI algorithms — which can be excellent at giving listeners what it knows they already like — is anticipating when you want to break out of that comfort zone.

Apr 15, 2024

Researchers identify brain region involved in control of attention

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, neuroscience

Researchers at the University of Iowa in a new study have linked a region in the brain to how humans redirect thoughts and attention when distracted.


University of Iowa researchers have identified a brain region involved in how attention or thought is diverted. In addition to its biological significance, the finding could help people with Parkinson’s disease who struggle with impulsive thoughts or erratic attention.

Apr 15, 2024

Keeping AI Projects In Check: Scoping AI Projects

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

With the ease of availability and access of AI tools and technology, people are putting AI into a wide range of products and services, and even in applications where AI is a dubious fit, at best. Many times, organizations are feeling the motivation, “fear of missing out”, and perhaps customer or shareholder pressure to add AI capability to their offerings. It should come as no surprise that many of these AI projects are often half thought-out, at best, and often fail to deliver the desired results, if the results have even been considered ahead of time.

Sometimes, AI projects have a high-level, big vision, where the AI efforts are focused. Other times, AI applications are being focused on smaller tasks, or shoehorned into existing applications. The challenge is that for AI projects to be successful, there needs to be a combination of a larger vision for where AI could add value while at the same time, smaller, focused projects that allow organizations to ensure value in the real-world before diving deeper into AI capabilities and investment.

Apr 15, 2024

Generative AI Sucks: Meta’s Chief AI Scientist Calls For A Shift To Objective-Driven AI

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

Dive into Yann LeCun’s perspective on the shortcomings of generative AI and his advocacy for Objective-Driven AI, offering a transformative approach.

Apr 15, 2024

US tech sleepwalking as China steals secrets, experts say

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

The latest scandal involves a Google engineer accused of stealing AI secrets.

Apr 15, 2024

The future of screens — it reacts to your touch, fingerprint, and even pulse

Posted by in categories: electronics, futurism

Touch screens are just displays with the array of sensors that make them work. Now, a new display can work as a touch screen without any additional sensors.

Apr 15, 2024

Musk’s xAI reveals Grok 1.5 Vision, claims top spatial understanding

Posted by in categories: food, robotics/AI

According to its website, the Grok 1.5V connects the physical and digital worlds. The company has highlighted seven examples of its capabilities to explain how the multimodal model works.

A user can share a picture of a flowchart with Grok, and the AI model can translate it into Python code. By simply showing the model a nutrition label, a user can inquire how many calories one would consume by consuming certain portions of the product.

While this might seem like an easy case of multiplication, the AI model can also take a child’s drawing and build an entire bedtime story using it. The model can do the converse, too. Show it a meme, and it will explain why it is funny and provide the context needed to understand it.

Apr 15, 2024

Cambridge startup’s AI telemonitor detects heart failure via foot volume

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

Cambridge startup Heartfelt Technologies’ AI telemonitor measures foot volume to monitor discharged heart patients for signs of heart failure.

Apr 15, 2024

Light-based chip: China’s Taichi could power artificial general intelligence

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

Taichi could potentially make artificial general intelligence a reality.

Researchers at Tsinghua University in China have developed a revolutionary new artificial intelligence (AI) chip that uses light instead of electricity to process data.


Researchers have developed a highly energy-efficient photonic AI chip called Taichi, which could accelerate the development of advanced computing solutions.

Apr 15, 2024

Chinese automaker launches world’s first EV with ‘semi-solid-state’ battery

Posted by in categories: internet, sustainability

In a promising step towards the evolution of next-generation electric vehicles (EV), Chinese car maker IM Motors has launched a car that features a version of solid-state batteries.

The battery pack, dubbed “Lightyear” by IM, is the primary power source for the company’s flagship L6 Lightyear Max, priced at approximately ¥330,000 (equivalent to US$45,600).

Continue reading “Chinese automaker launches world’s first EV with ‘semi-solid-state’ battery” »

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