Tech Xplore on MSN
How scientists are growing computers from human brain cells—and why they want to keep doing it
As prominent artificial intelligence (AI) researchers eye limits to the current phase of the technology, a different approach ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Why your brain outlearns AI, according to new research
Artificial intelligence can already beat grandmasters at Go, draft legal briefs, and generate photorealistic images in ...
As artificial intelligence (AI) races ahead, its capacities and limitations are now being computed by those at the forefront ...
Tech Xplore on MSN
Small changes make some AI systems more brain-like than others
Artificial intelligence systems that are designed with a biologically inspired architecture can simulate human brain activity ...
Choosing the right blueprint can accelerate learning in visual AI systems. Artificial intelligence systems built with biologically inspired structures can produce activity patterns similar to those ...
A recent publication in Nature Machine Intelligence really got me thinking. In this study, researchers created an artificial system that not only simulates but also behaves like our brain. This ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
Biocomputers: Scientists are turning human brain cells into functional computers
A biocomputer harnesses biologically derived materials, such as DNA, proteins, or living tissue (e.g., lab-grown neurons), to ...
Princeton researchers found that the brain excels at learning because it reuses modular “cognitive blocks” across many tasks.
AI or Artificial Intelligence refers to a technology designed to perform tasks that typically require human intelligence.
There’s no question that AI systems have accomplished some impressive feats, mastering games, writing text, and generating convincing images and video. That’s gotten some people talking about the ...
A top boffin has told the BBC that a detailed, functional artificial human brain can be built within the next 10 years. Henry Markram, who heads the Blue Brain Project, said he has already built bits ...
Research reveals why some images feel pleasing while others uncomfortable. The brain prefers visuals that cost less energy.
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