uruguay
Invited to Develop: Institutional Belonging and the Counterfactual Architecture of Development
This paper examines how institutional belonging shapes long-term development by comparing Spain and Uruguay, two small democracies with similar historical endowments whose trajectories diverged sharply after the 1960s. While Spain integrated into dense European institutional architectures, Uruguay remained embedded within the Latin American governance regime, characterized by weaker coordination and lower institutional coherence. To assess how alternative institutional embeddings could have altered these paths, the study develops a generative counterfactual framework grounded in economic complexity, institutional path dependence, and a Wasserstein GAN trained on data from 1960-2020. The resulting Expected Developmental Shift (EDS) quantifies structural gains or losses from hypothetical re-embedding in different institutional ecosystems. Counterfactual simulations indicate that Spain would have experienced significant developmental decline under a Latin American configuration, while Uruguay would have achieved higher complexity and resilience within a European regime. These findings suggest that development is not solely determined by domestic reforms but emerges from a country's structural position within transnational institutional networks.
- South America > Uruguay (0.68)
- Europe > Spain (0.68)
- Europe > United Kingdom > England > Cambridgeshire > Cambridge (0.14)
- (11 more...)
- Research Report > New Finding (0.48)
- Research Report > Experimental Study (0.46)
- Government (1.00)
- Banking & Finance (0.68)
- Law (0.68)
Data for Inclusion: The Redistributive Power of Data Economics
While credit is often portrayed as the fuel of development, access to credi t is unevenly distributed -- not merely as a function of income or collateral, but increasingly as a function of data visibility. In this context, the core hypothesis of this paper is that data, when governed ethically and reused efficiently, operates as a re distributive economic asset. The idea that being poor is more expensive is not new; it has been conceptualized as the "poverty premium" -- where low - income individuals pay higher effective prices for credit, insurance, and other services (Carrière - Swallow & Haksar, 2019). Y et what has ch anged is the infrastructure of decision - making: creditworthiness is increasingly determined by algorithmic systems whose inputs are not equitably distributed. Individuals with limited credit histories or fragmented digital footprints remain invisible, not due to financial incapacity, but due to informational exclusion. This asymmetry is not merely a market failure -- it is a structural inequality encoded in data regimes. W e argue that positive credit data -- payment histories, utilization patterns, and account stability -- constitutes a nonrival input that, once generated, can be reused across institutions at near - zero marginal cost without diminishing its value (Jones & Tonetti, 2020; Acemoglu et al., 2023). However, the ability to extract value from such data remains highly uneven. In traditional credit markets, the absence of negative signals penalizes borrowers more than the presence of positive behavior benefits them.
- South America > Uruguay (0.06)
- North America > United States > Tennessee > Davidson County > Nashville (0.04)
- North America > United States > Massachusetts > Middlesex County > Cambridge (0.04)
- (3 more...)
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence (1.00)
- Information Technology > Data Science > Data Mining (0.46)
13 inspiring photos of thriving deep-sea animals
A recent Schmidt Ocean Institute expedition off the coast of Uruguay discovered at least 30 suspected new species and explored a sunken warship. An octopus moves around deep-sea corals at 1,612 meters (about 5,288 feet) during a remotely operated vehicle, or ROV, dive near the historic HMS'Challenger's' oceanographic station 320, where the country's first coral samples were collected almost 150 years ago. Breakthroughs, discoveries, and DIY tips sent every weekday. An expedition led by a team of scientists from Uruguay discovered that the South American nation's deep-sea coral reefs are thriving and teeming with life. The reefs are primarily home to numerous species that were recently listed as vulnerable to extinction.
- South America > Uruguay (0.48)
- North America > Costa Rica (0.06)
- South America > Chile (0.05)
- North America > United States > Texas (0.05)
- Electrical Industrial Apparatus (0.57)
- Government > Military (0.51)
Machine Learning and Econometric Approaches to Fiscal Policies: Understanding Industrial Investment Dynamics in Uruguay (1974-2010)
This paper examines the impact of fiscal incentives on industrial investment in Uruguay from 1974 to 2010. Using a mixed-method approach that combines econometric models with machine learning techniques, the study investigates both the short-term and long-term effects of fiscal benefits on industrial investment. The results confirm the significant role of fiscal incentives in driving long-term industrial growth, while also highlighting the importance of a stable macroeconomic environment, public investment, and access to credit. Machine learning models provide additional insights into nonlinear interactions between fiscal benefits and other macroeconomic factors, such as exchange rates, emphasizing the need for tailored fiscal policies. The findings have important policy implications, suggesting that fiscal incentives, when combined with broader economic reforms, can effectively promote industrial development in emerging economies.
- South America > Uruguay (0.75)
- Africa (0.14)
- North America > United States (0.04)
- (3 more...)
- Research Report > New Finding (1.00)
- Research Report > Experimental Study (0.93)
- Government (1.00)
- Banking & Finance > Trading (1.00)
- Banking & Finance > Economy (1.00)
Reconocimiento de Objetos a partir de Nube de Puntos en un Ve\'iculo A\'ereo no Tripulado
Vidal, Agustina Marion de Freitas, Rodriguez, Anthony, Suarez, Richard, Kelbouscas, André, Grando, Ricardo
ABSTRACT Currently, research in robotics, artificial intelligence and drones are advancing exponentially, they are directly or indirectly related to various areas of the economy, from agriculture to industry. With this context, this project covers these topics guiding them, seeking to provide a framework that is capable of helping to develop new future researchers. For this, we use an aerial vehicle that works autonomously and is capable of mapping the scenario and providing useful information to the end user. This occurs from a communication between a simple programming language (Scratch) and one of the most important and efficient robot operating systems today (ROS). This is how we managed to develop a tool capable of generating a 3D map and detecting objects using the camera attached to the drone. Although this tool can be used in the advanced fields of industry, it is also an important advance for the research sector. The implementation of this tool in intermediate-level institutions is aspired to provide the ability to carry out high-level projects from a simple programming language.
- South America > Uruguay > Rivera > Rivera (0.06)
- North America > United States > California > Los Angeles County > El Segundo (0.05)
- South America > Uruguay > Soriano > Mercedes (0.04)
- North America > United States > Massachusetts > Middlesex County > Cambridge (0.04)
- Information Technology > Software (0.76)
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence > Robots (0.61)
Desarollo de un Dron Low-Cost para Tareas Indoor
Mattos, Martin, Grando, Ricardo, Kelbouscas, André
ABSTRACT: Commercial drones are not yet dimensioned to perform indoor autonomous tasks, since they use GPS for their location in the environment. When it comes to a space with physical obstacles (walls, metal, etc.) between the communication of the drone and the satellites that allow the precise location of the same, there is great difficulty in finding the satellites or it generates interference for this location. This problem can cause an unexpected action of the drone, a collision and a possible accident can occur, The work to follow presents the development of a drone capable of operating in a physical space (indoor), without the need for GPS. In this proposal, a prototype of a system for detecting the distance (lidar) that the drone is from the walls is also developed, with the aim of being able to take this information as the location of the drone.
Drones e Inteligencia Artificial para Investigaci\'on y Competici\'on
Saravia, Victoria, Moraes, William, Kelbouscas, André, Grando, Ricardo
This work focuses on drones or UAVs (Unmanned Aerial Vehicles) for use in industry in general. These vehicles have a large number of uses and potential in the industry, as a tool for civil engineering, medicine, mining, among others. However, this vehicle is limited for use indoors due to the need for GPS and it does not work indoors. In this way, this work presents a UAV that works without GPS, thus being able to be used in closed spaces for example and have good precision. The work is based on an approach that uses computer vision and GPS.
- South America > Uruguay > Rivera > Rivera (0.06)
- South America > Uruguay > Soriano > Mercedes (0.04)
- South America > Brazil (0.04)
- Europe > United Kingdom > England (0.04)
Rob\'otica M\'ovel e Intelig\^encia Artificial para Investiga\c{c}\~ao, Competi\c{c}\~ao e Automatiza\c{c}\~ao de Sistemas Industriais
Pereira, Hiago Jacobs Sodre, Moraes, Pablo Ezequiel, Kelbouscas, André Da Silva, Grando, Ricardo
Universidad Tecnológica del Uruguay, Rivera, Uruguay 2 ABSTRACT The implementation of robots to enhance some processes has become popular in recent years due to the accelerated way of production in some factories. Within this context was where robotics has emerged, firstly with stationary robots and more recently mobile robots, namely aerial and terrestrial robots. They can be used for delimited processes within a function, mainly the stationary robots, but also for research in wider areas and even competition. This work summarizes the construction of a model of terrestrial mobile robot that makes the use of artificial intelligence for the purpose of research and competitions, all of that with the basic sensing that can be used in industry. (Rovas, 2015).
- South America > Uruguay > Rivera > Rivera (0.25)
- South America > Uruguay > Montevideo > Montevideo (0.05)
- South America > Colombia > Bogotá D.C. > Bogotá (0.04)
- (3 more...)
In search of an ethical Artificial Intelligence that restores our faith in ourselves - Market Research Telecast
At the end of last month, a set of principles and advice on ethics in the use of Artificial Intelligence (AI) was known, adopted for the first time jointly and unanimously by the 193 member states of the General Council of the UNESCO. Beyond the uniqueness of its universal character, it is about Unesco launched a guide to improve the relationship between humans and robots and combines ethical issues to a warning voice that has been heard for a long time. There are already several international political organizations that have been warning about the need to provide an ethical component to what is undoubtedly the most notable advance in applied science of our time. In fact, in November but from '19 the European Union (EU) had published its Ethical Guidelines for a reliable artificial intelligence whose proposal revolves around the collateral effects, or unforeseen risks, that the implementation of disruptive technologies like this can generate. Likewise, in April of this year we learned about the European Commission regulation regarding the use of algorithms able to learn and make decisions.
- South America > Uruguay (0.05)
- South America > Argentina (0.05)
- Europe > United Kingdom > Scotland (0.05)
- Asia > Japan > Honshū > Kansai > Kyoto Prefecture > Kyoto (0.05)
- Energy (1.00)
- Government > Regional Government > Europe Government (0.55)