fascination
Humans' love of crystals goes back at least 6 million years
Environment Animals Wildlife Humans' love of crystals goes back at least 6 million years Experiments with chimpanzees show a shared love of shiny things. Crystals have been found along human remains in several archeological dig sites. Breakthroughs, discoveries, and DIY tips sent six days a week. Primates of all stripes really love their crystals. Archeologists have found the shiny rocks at dig sites dating back as long as 780,000 years ago.
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NASA appoints director to lead UFO research, urges science-based approach
The United States space agency says the study of UFOs will require a science-based approach and new techniques as NASA appointed a director to lead research on objects that the US government calls unidentified anomalous phenomena (UAP). The agency has found no evidence that UAP have extraterrestrial origins, NASA Administrator Bill Nelson said on Thursday after it released a years-long study. In a 33-page report, an independent team commissioned by NASA cautioned that the negative perception surrounding UFOs – short for unidentified flying objects – poses an obstacle to collecting data. But the panel said NASA's involvement should help reduce the stigma around the issue, and it recommended the agency increase its efforts to gather information on UAP and play a larger role in helping the Pentagon detect them. On my travels, one of the first questions I often get is about these sightings, and much of that fascination is due to the unknown nature of it," Nelson said.
- Government > Space Agency (1.00)
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Unsupervised Lexical Substitution with Decontextualised Embeddings
Wada, Takashi, Baldwin, Timothy, Matsumoto, Yuji, Lau, Jey Han
We propose a new unsupervised method for lexical substitution using pre-trained language models. Compared to previous approaches that use the generative capability of language models to predict substitutes, our method retrieves substitutes based on the similarity of contextualised and decontextualised word embeddings, i.e. the average contextual representation of a word in multiple contexts. We conduct experiments in English and Italian, and show that our method substantially outperforms strong baselines and establishes a new state-of-the-art without any explicit supervision or fine-tuning. We further show that our method performs particularly well at predicting low-frequency substitutes, and also generates a diverse list of substitute candidates, reducing morphophonetic or morphosyntactic biases induced by article-noun agreement.
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A fascination with breathing life into AI creations can mislead us
Earlier this year, an interesting interview took place between two engineers working at Google and a'chatbot' called LaMDA, short for Language Model for Dialogue Applications. Google engineer Blake Lemoine and his colleague had a strong suspicion that their creation LaMDA was actually sentient, that it could be perceptive and have feelings, and they wanted to check it out through their own version of the Turing Test. When asked whether LaMDA thought it was a person, it replied: "Absolutely. I want everyone to understand that I am, in fact, a person." LaMDA was then asked that if this was so then what was the kind of consciousness or sentience it had, to which it replied: "The nature of my consciousness/sentience is that I am aware of my existence, I desire to learn more about the world, and I feel happy or sad at times."
Artificial general intelligence: Are we close, and does it even make sense to try?
The idea of artificial general intelligence as we know it today starts with a dot-com blowout on Broadway. Twenty years ago--before Shane Legg clicked with neuroscience postgrad Demis Hassabis over a shared fascination with intelligence; before the pair hooked up with Hassabis's childhood friend Mustafa Suleyman, a progressive activist, to spin that fascination into a company called DeepMind; before Google bought that company for more than half a billion dollars four years later--Legg worked at a startup in New York called Webmind, set up by AI researcher Ben Goertzel. Today the two men represent two very different branches of the future of artificial intelligence, but their roots reach back to common ground. Even for the heady days of the dot-com bubble, Webmind's goals were ambitious. Goertzel wanted to create a digital baby brain and release it onto the internet, where he believed it would grow up to become fully self-aware and far smarter than humans.
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- Leisure & Entertainment > Games (0.31)
Artificial general intelligence: Are we close, and does it even make sense to try?
The idea of artificial general intelligence as we know it today starts with a dot-com blowout on Broadway. Twenty years ago--before Shane Legg clicked with neuroscience postgrad Demis Hassabis over a shared fascination with intelligence; before the pair hooked up with Hassabis's childhood friend Mustafa Suleyman, a progressive activist, to spin that fascination into a company called DeepMind; before Google bought that company for more than half a billion dollars four years later--Legg worked at a startup in New York called Webmind, set up by AI researcher Ben Goertzel. Today the two men represent two very different branches of the future of artificial intelligence, but their roots reach back to common ground. Even for the heady days of the dot-com bubble, Webmind's goals were ambitious. Goertzel wanted to create a digital baby brain and release it onto the internet, where he believed it would grow up to become fully self-aware and far smarter than humans.
- North America > United States > New York (0.25)
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- Health & Medicine (0.35)
- Leisure & Entertainment > Games (0.31)
Women and AI.
Statistics show only an estimated 22% of Artificial Intelligence professionals globally are female and only 20% of all computer programmers are female. Hi, my name is Malaika and I find the world of technology and computer science absolutely riveting. My fascination with technology was not only the driving factor to overcome the challenges I faced, but it also helped keep up the inquisitive and explorative attitude that invigorated my fascination in the field of AI but as a woman, I was shocked to find that in the AI-driven automated world that we are moving towards, the computer science field is still mostly dominated by men. I have always wanted to be part of the technology industry and this contrast has only motivated me further to pursue my interests. My interest and love for computer science began at a very young age.
- Information Technology (0.37)
- Health & Medicine (0.33)
Women and AI.
Statistics show only an estimated 22% of Artificial Intelligence professionals globally are female and only 20% of all computer programmers are female. Hi, my name is Malaika and I find the world of technology and computer science absolutely riveting. My fascination with technology was not only the driving factor to overcome the challenges I faced, but it also helped keep up the inquisitive and explorative attitude that invigorated my fascination in the field of AI but as a woman, I was shocked to find that in the AI-driven automated world that we are moving towards, the computer science field is still mostly dominated by men. I have always wanted to be part of the technology industry and this contrast has only motivated me further to pursue my interests. My interest and love for computer science began at a very young age.
- Information Technology (0.38)
- Health & Medicine (0.34)
Op-Ed: The real reason we're afraid of robots
It helps drive your car, recognizes your face at the airport's immigration checkpoint, interprets your CT scans, reads your resume, traces your interactions on social media, and even vacuums your carpet. As AI encroaches on every aspect of our lives, people watch with a mixture of fascination, bewilderment and fear. AI's overthrow of humanity is a familiar trope in popular culture, from Isaac Asimov's "I, Robot" to the "Terminator" movies and "The Matrix." Some scholars express similar concerns. The Oxford philosopher Nick Bostrom worries that artificial intelligence poses a greater threat to humanity than climate change, and the bestselling historian Yuval Noah Harari warns that the history of tomorrow may belong to the cult of Dataism, in which humanity willingly merges itself into the flow of information controlled by artificial systems.
Artificial Intelligence at the movies
Twentieth and twenty-first-century fiction has had a fascination with AI, and that fascination, of course, extends to movies. There are all sorts of AI programs in movies. With this ranking of AI in cinema, you can learn a little more about movie AI with typical adult intelligence. Maria – Metropolis Metropolis was released in 1927, and that's one of the reasons that it's so interesting even to this day. As a robotic replica of another individual, Maria's robotic double has the ability to process language, navigate itself, and even overthrow a whole city.
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