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Nov 25, 2021

Neuroscience explains exactly why we should be grateful for…our brains

Posted by in category: neuroscience

All these bequests of your bigger brain cortex mean you can gather four generations around a meal to exchange banter and gossip, turn information into knowledge and even practice the art of what-not-to-say-when.

You may even want to be thankful for another achievement of our neuron-crammed human cortices: All the technology that allows people spread over the globe to come together in person, on screens, or through words whispered directly into your ears long distance.

Nov 25, 2021

The secret of human intelligence

Posted by in categories: biological, robotics/AI

I continue to introduce you to a series of articles on the nature of human intelligence and the future of artificial intelligence systems. In the previous article “Artificial intelligence vs neurophysiology: Why the difference matters” we found out that the basis of the work of any biological nervous system is not a computational function (like in a computer), but a reflex or a prepared answer.

But how then did our intelligence come about? How did a biological system repeating pre-prepared reactions become a powerful creative machine?

In this article, we will answer this question in the language of facts. Creating our intelligence, nature has found a simple and at the same time ingenious solution, which is not devoid of a great mystery, which we will also touch.

Nov 25, 2021

Nvidia’s next AI can turn words into photorealistic images

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

Text-to-photorealism.


Nvidia deep learning technologies continue to do wonderful and weird things. Just a few weeks ago we saw how the company can use AI to automatically match voice lines to 3D animated faces. This cool kind of tech that can help people create great things with ease, or in the case of Nvidia’s latest unveiling, potentially horrible things, but still with ease.

Continue reading “Nvidia’s next AI can turn words into photorealistic images” »

Nov 25, 2021

Quantum double-slit experiment done with molecules for the first time

Posted by in categories: particle physics, quantum physics

Researchers prepare ‘new type of matter’ to conduct classic wave-particle duality experiment.


The iconic quantum double-slit experiment, which reveals how matter can behave like waves that displays interference and superposition, has for the first time been demonstrated with individual molecules as the slits.

Richard Feynman once said that the double-slit experiment reveals the central puzzles of quantum mechanics, putting us ‘up against the paradoxes and mysteries and peculiarities of nature’.

Continue reading “Quantum double-slit experiment done with molecules for the first time” »

Nov 25, 2021

Customer Service Kiosk with NVIDIA Omniverse Avatar for Project Tokkio

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

See customers interact with a second example of Project Tokkio, a Maxine-powered AI talking kiosk. This reference application leverages NVIDIA Metropolis vision AI and Riva speech #AI technology to communicate with the user. It uses NVIDIA’s Megatron-Turing NLG 530B, a state-of-the-art language model for understanding intent and NVIDIA Merlin to make meaningful recommendations. The 3D avatar is animated and visualized with NVIDIA Omniverse to deliver a visually stunning experience—all in real time.

Nov 25, 2021

Engineering teams have determined NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope is safe and ready for fueling after having completed a series of safety checks and tests

Posted by in categories: engineering, space

Preparations continue toward a target launch date of Dec. 22: https://blogs.nasa.gov/webb/2021/11/24/testing-confirms-webb…-22-launch

Nov 25, 2021

AI-Scientists May Usher in A Bright Future in the Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence

Posted by in categories: alien life, particle physics, policy, robotics/AI

It’s almost Time to use our AI Brothers to search for and Welcome our Space Brothers. Welcome AI and Space friends.


The best public policy is shaped by scientific evidence. Although obvious in retrospect, scientists often fail to follow this dictum. The refusal to admit anomalies as evidence that our knowledge base may have missed something important about reality stems from our ego. However, what will happen when artificial intelligence plays a starring role in the analysis of data? Will these future ‘AI-scientists’ alter the way information is processed and understood, all without human bias?

The mainstream of physics routinely embarks on speculations. For example, we invested 7.5 billion Euros in the Large Hadron Collider with the hope of finding Supersymmetry 0, without success. We invested hundreds of millions of dollars in the search for Weakly Interacting Massive Particles (WIMPs) as dark matter 0, and four decades later, we have been unsuccessful. In retrospect, these were searches in the dark. But one wonders why they were endorsed by the mainstream scientific community while less speculative searches are not?

Continue reading “AI-Scientists May Usher in A Bright Future in the Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence” »

Nov 25, 2021

How molecular clusters in the nucleus interact with chromosomes

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, computing, genetics

A cell stores all of its genetic material in its nucleus, in the form of chromosomes, but that’s not all that’s tucked away in there. The nucleus is also home to small bodies called nucleoli — clusters of proteins and RNA that help build ribosomes.

Using computer simulations, MIT chemists have now discovered how these bodies interact with chromosomes in the nucleus, and how those interactions help the nucleoli exist as stable droplets within the nucleus.

Their findings also suggest that chromatin-nuclear body interactions lead the genome to take on a gel-like structure, which helps to promote stable interactions between the genome and transcription machineries. These interactions help control gene expression.

Nov 25, 2021

In MIT visit, Dropbox CEO Drew Houston ’05 explores the accelerated shift to distributed work

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

When the cloud storage firm Dropbox decided to shut down its offices with the outbreak of the Covid-19 pandemic, co-founder and CEO Drew Houston ’05 h.

Nov 25, 2021

Robots and AI assist in designing and building Swiss university’s ‘hanging gardens’

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

Architecture and construction have always been, rather quietly, at the bleeding edge of tech and materials trends. It’s no surprise, then, especially at a renowned technical university like ETH Zurich, to find a project utilizing AI and robotics in a new approach to these arts. The automated design and construction they are experimenting with show how homes and offices might be built a decade from now.

The project is a sort of huge sculptural planter, “hanging gardens” inspired by the legendary structures in the ancient city of Babylon. (Incidentally, it was my ancestor, Robert Koldewey, who excavated/looted the famous Ishtar Gate to the place.)

Begun in 2019, Semiramis (named after the queen of Babylon back then) is a collaboration between human and AI designers. The general idea of course came from the creative minds of its creators, architecture professors Fabio Gramazio and Matthias Kohler. But the design was achieved by putting the basic requirements, such as size, the necessity of watering and the style of construction, through a set of computer models and machine learning algorithms.