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Aug 26, 2024

Organoid intelligence: a new biocomputing frontier | Frontiers in Science

Posted by in categories: biological, information science, robotics/AI, science

Organoid intelligence (OI) is an emerging scientific field aiming to create biocomputers where lab-grown brain organoids serve as ‘biological hardware’

In their article, published in Frontiers in Science, Smirnova et al., outline the multidisciplinary strategy needed to pursue this vision: from next-generation organoid and brain-computer interface technologies, to new machine-learning algorithms and big data infrastructures.

Continue reading “Organoid intelligence: a new biocomputing frontier | Frontiers in Science” »

Aug 26, 2024

Non-cognitive skills: DNA-based analyses suggest a hidden key to academic success

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, education, genetics, neuroscience

A new Nature Human Behaviour study, jointly led by Dr. Margherita Malanchini at Queen Mary University of London and Dr. Andrea Allegrini at University College London, has revealed that non-cognitive skills, such as motivation and self-regulation, are as important as intelligence in determining academic success. These skills become increasingly influential throughout a child’s education, with genetic factors playing a significant role.

The research, conducted in collaboration with an international team of experts, suggests that fostering non-cognitive skills alongside could significantly improve educational outcomes.

“Our research challenges the long-held assumption that intelligence is the primary driver of ,” says Dr. Malanchini, Senior Lecturer in Psychology at Queen Mary University of London.

Aug 26, 2024

A leap forward in nanotechnology: Growing special micro-crystals for better devices

Posted by in category: nanotechnology

In a paper published in the journal Advanced Materials, Dr. Atikur Rahman’s research group from the Physics department at IISER Pune, India, along with collaborators, report a new way to grow special crystals called CsPbBr3 nanoplatelets.

Aug 26, 2024

A bold challenge to the orthodox definition of life

Posted by in category: futurism

In her new book, Sara Walker explains why the key distinction between life and other kinds of ‘things’ is how the living use information.

Aug 26, 2024

Single-cell transcriptomics reveal transcriptional programs underlying male and female cell fate during Plasmodium falciparum gametocytogenesis

Posted by in category: futurism

P. falciparum (malaria) transmission includes the development of male and female parasite forms called gametocytes, which are taken up by the Anopheles mosquito. The authors of this study use single cell transcriptomics to define the transcriptional programs, identify key regulators and predict novel genes, involved in driving the male and female sexual cell fates.

Aug 26, 2024

Parvovirus B19 is spreading across the U.S. What to know about the disease that causes ‘slapped cheek’ rash in children

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

The CDC warned of increasing viral activity on the heels of “unusually high numbers of cases” in Europe earlier this year.

Aug 26, 2024

Psychedelics Can Awaken Your Consciousness to the ‘Ultimate Reality,’ Scientists Say

Posted by in category: neuroscience

Substances like ayahuasca and psilocybin can induce a sense of unity with the world—and even allow some users to “see God.”

Aug 26, 2024

SpaceX to launch Polaris Dawn flight featuring billionaire crew member, first commercial spacewalk

Posted by in category: space travel

Along with the first private-sector spacewalk, the SpaceX Polaris Dawn crew also will set a new Earth-orbit altitude record.

Aug 26, 2024

Humanoid robots are coming

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

Picking up a box and placing it in a neat pile is not an impressive action in itself for a robot; understanding an enigmatic human command and correctly deciphering and explaining the decision-making process, are definitely innovations. Digit owes parts of its progress to the generative artificial intelligence revolution that also reached the field of robotics and turned expectations from it on its head. “I’ve been asked what’s the biggest thing in 2024 besides language modeling — it’s robotics. Period,” Nvidia’s senior AI scientist Jim Fan wrote in December. “We’re about three years away from a ChatGPT moment for physical AI agents,” he explained.

Ever since Fan made this statement, it seems that everyone is talking about the “ChatGPT moment of robotics”, or the hope of a technological breakthrough that will push the field forward and finally fill our homes with intelligent humanoid robots to help us with household chores, wash the floor, set the table or do the laundry (but not fold it). “What has been happening in recent months is dramatic,” explains Amir Bousani, CEO of R-Go Robotics, which recently entered into a partnership with Nvidia to equip the robot it is developing with its spatial perception capabilities. “The physical world is more difficult than the internet,” notes Dr. Oren Etzioni, founding CEO of the Allen Institute for Artificial Intelligence, “but the field of robots that have the ability to behave in general is running much faster today.”

The huge interest in humanoid robots, or humanoids, which Fan is talking about, is evident in the constant announcements in the field: in February, the startup Figure raised $675 million from Jeff Bezos, Nvidia, and OpenAI for the development of the humanoid. In March, Nvidia’s CEO stood on the stage of the company’s developer conference alongside nine humanoids from different companies and announced that building models for robots is “one of the most exciting problems to solve in artificial intelligence”; in April, Elon Musk promised that he would launch the humanoid robot he is developing — Optimus — next year and predicted that by 2040 there will be a billion humanoids among us. A short time later, the activities of Mentee Robotics, Amnon Shashua’s company that was founded two years ago and also develops the humanoid, went public.

Aug 26, 2024

Stephen Wolfram thinks we need philosophers working on big questions around AI

Posted by in categories: health, robotics/AI

“My main life work, along with basic science, has been building our Wolfram language computational language for the purpose of having a way to express things computationally that’s useful to both humans and computers,” Wolfram told TechCrunch.

As AI developers and others start to think more deeply about how computers and people intersect, Wolfram says it is becoming much more of a philosophical exercise, involving thinking in the pure sense about the implications this kind of technology may have on humanity. That kind of complex thinking is linked to classical philosophy.

Continue reading “Stephen Wolfram thinks we need philosophers working on big questions around AI” »

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