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Robot Microscopes, AI Bias Among IBM's 5 'Life in 2023' Predictions

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AI-powered robot microscopes may save them: Small autonomous AI microscopes, networked in the cloud and deployed around the world, will continually monitor in real time the health of one of Earth's most important and threatened resource: water." But only unbiased AI will survive: Our AI systems are only as good as the data they're trained on. While biased data can inspire unfair results, IBM believes AI actually holds the key to helping us identify the prejudices hiding in our data – so we can build better systems, and become better humans. IBM researchers are already progressing a testing system to get us there." AI-powered robot microscopes may save them: Small autonomous AI microscopes, networked in the cloud and deployed around the world, will continually monitor in real time the health of one of Earth's most important and threatened resource: water." But only unbiased AI will survive: Our AI systems are only as good as the data they're trained on. While biased data can inspire unfair results, IBM believes AI actually holds the key to helping us identify the prejudices hiding in our data – so we can build better systems, and become better humans. IBM researchers are already progressing a testing system to get us there."


Dragonflies Teach Us How to Build Better Systems with Artificial Intelligence

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In the October5, 2015 issue of the Wall Street Journal, there appeared a feature article titled: "Scientists Tap Dragonfly Vision to Build a Better Bionic Eye", with the subtitle: "Artificial-intelligence system could aid the blind and help create a better driverless car." The actual article was written by Rachel Pannett and starts as follows: "What can humans learn from dragonflies? Australian researchers have developed an artificial-intelligence system based on a dragonfly's vision that they say could help improve the eyesight of people who can see almost nothing. The system also is expected to find applications in automated technologies that rely on artificial sight, such as robots and driverless cars." In this article, the dragonfly's remarkable ability as a predator is mentioned.