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Sep 28, 2022
BIG designs an energy efficient residential complex in Amsterdam shaped like the bow of a ship
Posted by Shubham Ghosh Roy in category: energy
Bjarke Ingels Group and Barcode Architects collaborated to create ‘Sluishuis’ – an angular residential complex placed above the IJ Lake in Amsterdam. The structure’s sharp geometric ends meet in the air, water, and land, creating a mesmerizing structure that seems to be jutting into the sky while resembling the bow of a ship! It is constructed on an artificial island in the IJ Lake and forms a geometrically-intriguing gateway from the lake.
Designer: Bjarke Ingels Group x Barcode Architects.
Sep 28, 2022
AI audio is on the rise and will spark new debates about the value of human effort
Posted by Kelvin Dafiaghor in categories: entertainment, robotics/AI
A well-known game studio is allegedly using AI voices for a video game. A clarification includes a commitment to human creativity. It’s another footnote in the debate over the value of human labor that will become more common in the future.
It’s the very debate that has erupted so vehemently around AI-generated images in recent months. Are AI images art? If so, can they be equated with human art? Are they detrimental to art? Are they even plagiarism, because the AI examines human works during training – in the inspiration phase, so to speak – and then imitates them in trace elements?
Sep 28, 2022
Researchers identify new model of Alzheimer’s as an autoimmune disease
Posted by Kelvin Dafiaghor in categories: biotech/medical, health, neuroscience
Scientists at the Krembil Brain Institute, part of the University Health Network, have proposed a new mechanistic model (AD2) for Alzheimer’s, looking at it not as a brain disease, but as a chronic autoimmune condition that attacks the brain.
This novel research is published today, in Alzheimer’s & Dementia.
“We don’t think of Alzheimer’s as fundamentally a disease of the brain. We think of it as a disease of the immune system within the brain,” says Dr. Donald Weaver, co-Director of the Krembil Brain Institute and author of the paper.
Sep 28, 2022
Optimus Is Coming: Are You Ready For Tesla’s Robot Humanoid Invasion?
Posted by Kelvin Dafiaghor in category: robotics/AI
Tesla will be showing off a working prototype of its Optimus humanoid robot at AI Day next week. Should we be afraid for our lives?
Sep 28, 2022
Latest Computer Vision Research Present a Novel Audio-Visual Framework, ‘ECLIPSE,’ for Long-Range Video Retrieval
Posted by Kelvin Dafiaghor in category: computing
Sep 28, 2022
It’s time to replace animal testing with a better alternative
Posted by Kelvin Dafiaghor in categories: biotech/medical, food
Methuselah Foundation recently announced a $1 million competition to.
encourage innovation that will enable medicine to move away from unreliable.
animal testing. The change is long overdue. In the U.S., all our food and.
drug research has been guided by the 1938 Federal Food, Drug and Cosmetics.
Act, which requires that every drug be tested on animals. While this was.
state-of-the-art scientific process 84 years ago, we can do much better today. The reason why is simple: Animal testing is unreliable, ineffective.
And costly.
Sep 27, 2022
13 open source projects transforming AI and machine learning
Posted by Jose Ruben Rodriguez Fuentes in categories: information science, robotics/AI
Open source is fertile ground for transformative software, especially in cutting-edge domains like artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning. The open source ethos and collaboration tools make it easier for teams to share code and data and build on the success of others.
This article looks at 13 open source projects that are remaking the world of AI and machine learning. Some are elaborate software packages that support new algorithms. Others are more subtly transformative. All of them are worth a look.
Sep 27, 2022
Graphene is a Nobel Prize-winning “wonder material.” Graphyne might replace it
Posted by Raphael Ramos in category: materials
A two-dimensional material made entirely of carbon called graphene won the Nobel Prize in 2010. might be even better.
Sep 27, 2022
Researchers identify African dust
Posted by Saúl Morales Rodriguéz in category: chemistry
Every summer, weather forecasters blast news about African dust plumes crossing the southern United States. And to most people, it’s just dust, but to researchers at Texas A&M University, it’s much more.
Researchers have developed a new method called isotope-resolved chemical mass balance to identify dust participles using isotopic measurements. Their new research builds off previous studies where they identified and quantified the dust by determining the elemental composition.
The study was recently published in Environmental Science & Technology.