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Congratulations to the #AAMAS2026 best paper award winners

Robohub

The AAMAS 2026 best paper awards were presented at the 25th International Conference on Autonomous Agents and Multiagent Systems, which took place from 25-29 May 2025 in Paphos, Cyprus. Lucy Smith is Senior Managing Editor for Robohub and AIhub. Lucy Smith is Senior Managing Editor for Robohub and AIhub. In this special live recording at the Great Exhibition Road Festival in London, Claire chatted to George Mylonas (Imperial College London), Antonia Tzemanaki (University of Bristol) and Tom Vercauteren (King's College London) about robotics and AI in medicine and healthcare. Researchers are developing AI models that could one day enable vision prosthetics able to restore meaningful, object-level sight for the blind.


Video: AI models predict World Cup results

Al Jazeera

We asked four AI models to predict the winner of the 2026 FIFA World Cup. This is what Grok, ChatGPT, Claude, and Gemini had to say. Australian man charged with murder after Thai girl's body found in suitcase


Still paying for cable? These simple tips can lower your bill

PCWorld

PCWorld highlights strategies to reduce cable bills without canceling service, including using provider streaming apps and negotiating better rates. Cable companies like Comcast, Spectrum, and DirecTV offer free streaming apps that can save $7-15 monthly per TV by eliminating set-top box rentals. Threatening to cancel service often unlocks significant discounts, while bundled streaming services through providers offer additional savings opportunities.


After WWII, flying saucer-shaped houses almost filled American suburbs

Popular Science

More information Adding us as a Preferred Source in Google by using this link indicates that you would like to see more of our content in Google News results. The Dymaxion House weighed only three tons, about as much as a full-size pickup truck, and could be shipped anywhere in America for $100. Breakthroughs, discoveries, and DIY tips sent six days a week. By signing up, you confirm you are 16+, will receive newsletters and promotional content and agree to our Terms of Use and acknowledge the data practices in our Privacy Policy . Tucked into a corner of the cavernous Henry Ford Museum of American Innovation, just outside Detroit, is a structure that looks like a cross between a Mongolian yurt and a flying saucer.


Secure your home with 3 Blink cameras under 45

PCWorld

When you purchase through links in our articles, we may earn a small commission. Secure more of your home for less with this Blink Mini 2 deal, which gets you three 2K security cameras for just $44.99. You can get three Blink Mini 2K+ security cameras for just $44.99 right now, down from their usual $99.99 MSRP. As an early Prime Deal, this is one of the lowest prices we've seen for this bundle, which previously dropped to around $65. Three cameras for under $45 means you can cover the front entry, back door, and garage with a single purchase. The 2K resolution is absolutely jaw-dropping for a security camera in this price range.


The Dual Nature of Plasticity Loss in Deep Continual Learning: Dissection and Mitigation

Neural Information Processing Systems

Loss of plasticity (LoP) is the primary cause of cognitive decline in normal aging brains next to cell loss. Recent works show that similar LoP also plagues neural networks during deep continual learning (DCL). While it has been shown that random perturbations of learned weights can alleviate LoP, its underlying mechanisms remain insufficiently understood. Here we offer a unique view of LoP and dissect its mechanisms through the lenses of an innovative framework combining the theory of neural collapse and finite-time Lyapunov exponents (FTLE) analysis. We show that LoP actually consists of two contrasting types: (i) type-1 LoP is characterized by highly negative FTLEs, where the network is prevented from learning due to the collapse of representations; (ii) while type-2 LoP is characterized by excessively positive FTLEs, where the network can train well but the growingly chaotic behaviors reduce its test accuracy. Based on these understandings, we introduce Generalized Mixup, designed to relax the representation space for prolonged DCL and demonstrate its superior efficacy vs. existing methods.


On the Robustness of Transformers against Context Hijacking for Linear Classification

Neural Information Processing Systems

Transformer-based Large Language Models (LLMs) have demonstrated powerful in-context learning capabilities. However, their predictions can be disrupted by factually correct context, a phenomenon known as context hijacking, revealing a significant robustness issue. To understand this phenomenon theoretically, we explore an in-context linear classification problem based on recent advances in linear transformers. In our setup, context tokens are designed as factually correct query-answer pairs, where the queries are similar to the final query but have opposite labels. Then, we develop a general theoretical analysis on the robustness of the linear transformers, which is formulated as a function of the model depth, training context lengths, and number of hijacking context tokens. A key finding is that a well-trained deeper transformer can achieve higher robustness, which aligns with empirical observations. We show that this improvement arises because deeper layers enable more fine-grained optimization steps, effectively mitigating interference from context hijacking. This is also well supported by our numerical and real-world experiments. Our findings provide theoretical insights into the benefits of deeper architectures and contribute to enhancing the understanding of transformer architectures.


CoreGuard: Safeguarding Foundational Capabilities of LLMs Against Model Stealing in Edge Deployment

Neural Information Processing Systems

Proprietary large language models (LLMs) exhibit strong generalization capabilities across diverse tasks and are increasingly deployed on edge devices for efficiency and privacy reasons. However, deploying proprietary LLMs at the edge without adequate protection introduces critical security threats. Attackers can extract model weights and architectures, enabling unauthorized copying and misuse. Even when protective measures prevent full extraction of model weights, attackers may still perform advanced attacks, such as fine-tuning, to further exploit the model. Existing defenses against these threats typically incur significant computational and communication overhead, making them impractical for edge deployment. To safeguard the edge-deployed LLMs, we introduce CoreGuard, a computation-and communication-efficient protection method. CoreGuard employs an efficient protection protocol to reduce computational overhead and minimize communication overhead via a propagation protocol. Extensive experiments show that CoreGuard achieves upper-bound security protection with negligible overhead.


The Download: "reprogramming" aging, and the hidden sense of interoception

MIT Technology Review

The Download: "reprogramming" aging, and the hidden sense of interoception Plus: SpaceX has officially delivered the largest IPO in history. Why "reprogramming" is the buzziest approach to reversing aging right now Earlier this week, Life Biosciences, a biotech company focused on reversing age-related diseases, announced that it had dosed its first volunteer. A person with glaucoma has had an experimental treatment injected straight into their eyeball. The idea is to treat the disease by regenerating healthy nerves in the eye--but the company already hopes to go further. If the treatment can reverse glaucoma, similar treatments could reverse other diseases of aging. Maybe, just maybe, they could reverse aging altogether.


You can finally save on a Nintendo Switch 2

PCWorld

When you purchase through links in our articles, we may earn a small commission. The Nintendo Switch 2 almost never goes on sale, but a new Woot coupon finally knocks $15 off the price. The Nintendo Switch 2 is rarely discounted, but you can save $15 on your purchase right now. That's not a huge discount, sure, but on a console that never goes on sale, it's a fantastic excuse to finally take the plunge. The Nintendo Switch 2 launched in June 2025, and since then, we haven't seen it on sale despite checking frequently.