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Dr Michelle Tempest Big Brain Revolution: Artificial Intelligence - Spy or Saviour?

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Released today, The Big Brain Revolution shows the impact of Artificial Intelligence (AI) on the human brain, uncovering hidden secrets from the science of neuro-technology. The author examines the evidence that bombarding 1.4kg of brain matter with pings, dings and rings is re-wiring our neurons - transforming the way humans think and act. AI is able to read signals from your body and brain, detecting when you lie and finding out when you fall in love. The book is a fun fact-filled review of the latest advancements in everything from restoring memory loss to robot parents. Readers will also discover psychological strategies for healthy thinking in a technological age with techniques to help keep control of your own brain.


Argonne National Laboratory Deploys Cerebras CS-1, the World's Fastest Artificial Intelligence Computer

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LOS ALTOS, CALIFORNIA and LEMONT, ILLINOIS โ€“ Cerebras Systems, a company dedicated to accelerating artificial intelligence (AI) compute, and the Argonne National Laboratory, a multidisciplinary science and engineering research center, today announced that Argonne is the first national laboratory to deploy the Cerebras CS-1 system. Unveiled today at SC19, the CS-1 is the fastest AI computer system in existence and integrates the pioneering Wafer Scale Engine, the largest and fastest AI processor ever built. By removing compute as the bottleneck in AI, the CS-1 enables AI practitioners to answer more questions and explore more ideas in less time. The CS-1 delivers record-breaking performance and scale to AI compute, and its deployment across national laboratories enables the largest supercomputer sites in the world to achieve 100- to 1,000-fold improvement over existing AI accelerators. By pairing supercompute power with the CS-1's AI processing capabilities, Argonne can now accelerate research and development of deep learning models to solve science problems not achievable with existing systems.


Managing Marketing: How To Solve Business Problems Through AI Technology

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Managing Marketing is a weekly podcast hosted by TrinityP3. Each one is a conversation with a marketing thought-leader, professional, practitioner or expert on the issues and topics of interest to marketers and business leaders everywhere. In this special series, TrinityP3's Anton Buchner, discusses the rise of Artificial Intelligence and the impact it is having on marketing. Jay Henderson is the Senior Vice President of Product Management at Acoustic (formerly Watson Customer Engagement โ€“ purchased from IBM by Centerbridge Partners, and rebranded in 2019 as Acoustic). He talks about how machine learning algorithms should be seen as working together with marketers. Offering options and solutions for marketers to assess and consider, rather than being seen as a distrustful'black box' of solutions running rampant by themselves. Welcome to Managing Marketing, a weekly podcast where we sit down and talk with marketing thought leaders and experts on the issues and topics of interest to marketers and business leaders everywhere. To discuss this I'm sitting down today with Jay Henderson. Jay is the senior vice-president of product management for Acoustic. Thanks, I'm really excited to be here. You've just flown in so you've got over your jetlag? I got here a couple of days ago. We're here today in Sydney to launch the Acoustic brand and the company into the Australian market.


Introducing the AI Index 2019 Report

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We're excited to release the AI Index 2019 Report, one of the most comprehensive studies about AI to date. Because AI touches so many aspects of society, the Index takes an interdisciplinary approach by design, analyzing and distilling patterns about AI's broad global impact on everything from national economies to job growth, research and public perception. The purpose of the project is to ground the discussion on AI in data, serving practitioners, industry leaders, policymakers and funders, the general public and the media that informs it. An independent initiative within Stanford University's Human-Centered Artificial Intelligence Institute, the report is in its third year and is the result of a collaborative effort led by the AI Index Steering Committee, an interdisciplinary group of experts from across academia and industry, in collaboration with more than 35 sponsoring partners and data contributors. The first two reports established the Index as the preeminent source of data about AI.


Using artificial intelligence to help mitigate suicide risk

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According to the CDC, the suicide rate for individuals 10-24 years old has increased 56% between 2007 and 2017. In comparison to the general population, more than half of people experiencing homelessness have had thoughts of suicide or have attempted suicide, the National Health Care for the Homeless Council reported. Phebe Vayanos, assistant professor of Industrial and Systems Engineering and Computer Science at the USC Viterbi School of Engineering has been enlisting the help of a powerful ally -artificial intelligence- to help mitigate the risk of suicide. In this research, we wanted to find ways to mitigate suicidal ideation and death among youth. Our idea was to leverage real-life social network information to build a support network of strategically positioned individuals that can'watch-out' for their friends and refer them to help as needed." Vayanos, an associate director at USC's Center for Artificial Intelligence in Society (CAIS), and her team have been working over the last couple of years to design an algorithm capable of identifying who in a given real-life social group would be the best persons to be trained as "gatekeepers" capable of identifying warning signs of suicide and how to respond. Vayanos and Ph.D. candidate Aida Rahmattalabi, the lead author of the study "Exploring Algorithmic Fairness in Robust Graph Covering Problems," investigated the potential of social connections such as friends, relatives, and acquaintances to help mitigate the risk of suicide. Their paper will be presented at the Thirty-third Conference on Neural Information Processing Systems (NeurIPS) this week. "We want to ensure that a maximum number of people are being watched out for, taking into account resource limitations and uncertainties of open world deployment.


Is Artificial Intelligence Magic?

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Artificial intelligence can perform feats that seem like sorcery. AI can drive cars and fly drones. It can compose original music, write poetry that isn't too awful, and design recipes that do sound awful (blueberry and spinach pizza, anyone?). AI can do some things better than humans: lip reading, diagnosing diseases such as pneumonia and some cancers, transcribing speech, and playing Jeopardy!, Go, Texas Hold'em, and a variety of video games. AI software can even learn to make its own AI software.


IQ test for artificial intelligence systems WSU Insider Washington State University

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Washington State University researchers are creating the first-ever "IQ test" for artificial intelligence (AI) systems that would score systems on how well they learn and adapt to new, unknown environments. Diane Cook, Regents Professor and Huie-Rogers Chair Professor, and Larry Holder, professor in the School of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, received a grant of just over $1 million from the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) to create a framework to test the "intelligence" of AI systems. "Previously, research on measuring intelligence in AI systems has been mostly theoretical," Holder said. Holder and Cook will design a test that will grade AI systems based on the difficulty of problems that they can solve. Creating methods to rank problems on their difficulty will be one of the major parts of the research.


Turkey acquires new military drone with a machine gun mount that can fire bursts of 15 bullets

Daily Mail - Science & tech

Turkey will be the first customer for a new military drone with a machine gun mount that can fire single shots or 15-round bursts and carry a total of 200 rounds. Developed by the Asisguard, a technology firm in Ankara that specializes in military technology, the drone will use a laser sighting system to deliver a high degree of accuracy. The drone will also use a set of robotic braces to offset weapon recoil and ensure the drone's flight path isn't thrown off by firing. According to a report in the New Scientist, the drone will be able to hit targets as small as six inches from a distance of up to 650 feet. The 55-pound drone, called Songar, will be able to travel up to six miles at heights of up to 1.7 miles above ground.


Altdeep Newsletter

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AltDeep is a newsletter focused on microtrend-spotting in data and decision science, machine learning, and AI. Know an engineer, research scientist, AI product manager, or entrepreneur in the AI space? Buy them a gift subscription. The Economist is the latest top tier publication to hype the GPT-2 transformer network language model created by OpenAI. They did so by "interviewing" the network, meaning that it generated "unedited" answers to the questions.


What's so cool about #AI for networks?

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Sign in to report inappropriate content. As I get ready to head out to Las Vegas for Juniper NXTWORK 2019 with Tech Field Day, I'm wondering what the big deal is. Why is AI and machine learning so important for networking? What are they trying to solve or add that makes my life better?