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Mar 10, 2016
Electroceuticals: The Future of Medicine
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: biotech/medical, futurism
More news from DARPA’s Electrical Rx efforts along with GSK’s own advancement.
In the future, doctors won’t treat diseases with drugs. Instead, they’ll use tiny implantable devices that communicate with our body’s electrical language.
Mar 10, 2016
Giant step forward taken in generating optical qubits
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: computing, quantum physics
More large steps forward in Quantum technology with the latest chip with optical qubits.
The optical chip overcomes a number of obstacles in the development of quantum computers. A research team has demonstrated that on-chip quantum frequency combs can be used to simultaneously generate multiphoton entangled quantum bit states. It is the first chip capable of simultaneously generating multi-photon qubit states and two-photon entangled states on hundreds of frequency modes. The chip is scalable, compact, and compatible with existing technologies.
Mar 10, 2016
Gravitational Waves Will Show The Quantum Nature Of Reality
Posted by Karen Hurst in category: quantum physics
Now that LIGO has finally seen gravitational waves, we know that ripples in the fabric of space are real. But is gravity fundamentally a quantum force? Gravitational waves can teach us, but it’s won’t be LIGO that does it!
Mar 10, 2016
IARPA awards $18.7 million contract to Allen Institute to reconstruct neuronal connections
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: biotech/medical, engineering, information science, neuroscience, robotics/AI
Allen Institute working with Baylor on reconstructing neuronal connections.
The Intelligence Advanced Research Projects Activity (IARPA) has awarded an $18.7 million contract to the Allen Institute for Brain Science, as part of a larger project with Baylor College of Medicine and Princeton University, to create the largest ever roadmap to understand how the function of networks in the brain’s cortex relates to the underlying connections of its individual neurons.
The project is part of the Machine Intelligence from Cortical Networks (MICrONS) program, which seeks to revolutionize machine learning by reverse-engineering the algorithms of the brain.
Mar 10, 2016
Navy Wants to Rush Lockheed Martin’s $2.6 Billion Missile to the Front
Posted by Karen Hurst in category: military
The bigger question to this article is “WHY?” Is there an upcoming conflict or war waiting in the wings? And if so, with who?
So what’s the holdup?
Mar 10, 2016
Artificial intelligence you can wear on your shirt
Posted by Karen Hurst in category: robotics/AI
MyMe is a clip-on wellness and personal assistant device that receives, decodes and categorizes video and audio input (without making you look silly).
Mar 10, 2016
Machine learning underpins data-driven AI: Una-May O’Reilly
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: biotech/medical, computing, health, information science, robotics/AI
Another data scientist with pragmatic thinking which is badly needed today. Keeping it real with Una-May O’Reilly.
Mumbai: Una-May O’Reilly, principal research scientist at Anyscale Learning For All (ALFA) group at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory, has expertise in scalable machine learning, evolutionary algorithms, and frameworks for large-scale, automated knowledge mining, prediction and analytics. O’Reilly is one of the keynote speakers at the two-day EmTech India 2016 event, to be held in New Delhi on 18 March.
In an email interview, she spoke, among other things, about how machine learning underpins data-driven artificial intelligence (AI), giving the ability to predict complex events from predictive cues within streams of data. Edited excerpts:
Continue reading “Machine learning underpins data-driven AI: Una-May O’Reilly” »
Mar 10, 2016
Why You Want Your Drone to Have Emotions
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: drones, employment, robotics/AI
I like this article; why? Because if I plan to make any investment into a robot that is my personal assistant, or housekeeper, or caregiver, etc. I want to ensure that they fit my own needs as a person. Many of us have taken some sort of a personality profile for work; interview for jobs where you were reviewed to be a “fit” culturaly, etc. as well as met people 1st before you hired them. So, why should be any different from the so called “humnoid robots?” And, this should be intriguing for some of us where only 6% of your gender thinks and processes information like you do.
Emotional behaviors can make your drone seem like it’s an adventurer, anti-social, or maybe just exhausted.
Continue reading “Why You Want Your Drone to Have Emotions” »
Mar 10, 2016
Most Americans think machines will have our jobs in 50 yrs
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: employment, robotics/AI
Now, we’re saying 50 yrs instead of 30 yrs. And, 3 months ago it was 10 yrs. I guess 6 months from now it will be 100 yrs from now. Folks need to get a little more pragmatic instead of hyping too much or you will lose creditability with consumers and the markets.
Pew Report: Majority think AI will replace humans, though most still believe their job is secure by Steven Loeb on March 10, 2016.