“The Women Changing The Face Of AI”
“The idea was born in a hotel room. In 2005, Hanna Wallach, a machine-learning researcher, found herself bunking with colleagues to attend the Neural Information Systems Processing (NIPS) conference.”
“The idea was born in a hotel room. In 2005, Hanna Wallach, a machine-learning researcher, found herself bunking with colleagues to attend the Neural Information Systems Processing (NIPS) conference.”
“As some would have it, robots are poised to take over the world in about 3 … 2 … 1 … But one machine-learning expert — who is, after all, in a position to know — thinks that’s not the biggest issue facing artificial intelligence. In fact, it’s not an issue at all.”
“We hold certain truths about cities to be self-evident.”
Read: Spaces: What A Neural Network Thinks About Your Neighborhood–And Why It Matters
“Mark Johnson wants to beat the United States Department of Agriculture at its own game: predicting yields of America’s crops. The USDA puts boots on the ground, deploying hundreds of workers to survey thousands of farms a month ahead of the October corn harvest, America’s biggest crop.”
Read: This startup uses machine learning and satellite imagery to predict crop yields
“Mark Johnson wants to beat the United States Department of Agriculture at its own game: predicting yields of America’s crops. The USDA puts boots on the ground, deploying hundreds of workers to survey thousands of farms a month ahead of the October corn harvest, America’s biggest crop.”
Read: This startup uses machine learning and satellite imagery to predict crop yields
“A machine mapped the most frequently used emotional trajectories in fiction, and compared them with the ones readers like best.”
“A machine mapped the most frequently used emotional trajectories in fiction, and compared them with the ones readers like best.”
“Satya Nadella bounded into the conference room, eager to talk about intelligence. I was at Microsoft’s headquarters in Redmond, WA, and the company’s CEO was touting the company’s progress in building more intelligent apps and services.”
“Amazon has crowned the latest champion in its robotic picking challenge — an annual competition that looks for robots that could one day work in the company’s warehouses. It’s basically American Idol, but for robotic arms that can grab items off a shelf and put them back again.”
Read: Amazon’s latest robot champion uses deep learning to stock shelves
“Amazon has crowned the latest champion in its robotic picking challenge — an annual competition that looks for robots that could one day work in the company’s warehouses. It’s basically American Idol, but for robotic arms that can grab items off a shelf and put them back again.”
Read: Amazon’s latest robot champion uses deep learning to stock shelves