News

Hail comes in different shapes, sizes, and can even vary between clear and cloudy. This is because hail grows in different ways, and they relate to how strong a storm is and what it is likely to ...
Assessing the progress of new AI language models can be as challenging as training them. Stanford researchers offer a new approach.
New research reveals how early-life blurry, low-color vision may help shape the brain’s visual pathways into specialized systems.
The era of predictive modeling enhanced with machine learning and artificial intelligence (AI) to aid clinical ...
Materials and Methods We proposed a hybrid two-phase information extraction framework that combined a Unified Medical Language System parser (phase-1) with a fine-tuned large language model (LLM; ...
This important study presents a new method for longitudinally tracking cells in two-photon imaging data that addresses the specific challenges of imaging neurons in the developing cortex. It provides ...
Dr. James McCaffrey presents a complete end-to-end demonstration of the kernel ridge regression technique to predict a single numeric value. The demo uses stochastic gradient descent, one of two ...
PhoSim simulates the atmosphere, including air turbulence, as well as distortions from the shape of the telescope’s mirrors and the electrical properties of the sensors. The photons are propagated ...
Blue sharks possess a secret hidden in their skin: a sophisticated arrangement of microscopic crystals and pigments that create their brilliant blue appearance — and may allow them to change color.
Microsoft has been hit with a lawsuit by a group of authors who claim the company used their books without permission to train its Megatron artificial intelligence model.
The uncontrolled deployment of machine learning in medicine can distort patient information and sacrifice long-term data reliability for short-term benefits.
Using copyrighted books to train AI chatbot is 'fair use,' judge rules Can AI companies use authors' creative works to train their chatbots? A San Francisco judge says yes.