artificial intelligence
The future of artificial intelligence.
Vectors are over, hashes are the future of AI
Artificial intelligence has been built on the back of vector arithmetic. Recent advances show for certain AI applications this can actually be drastically outperformed (memory, speed, etc) by other binary representations (such as neural hashes) without significant performance trade off.
By CHANGLONG SUN4 years ago in Futurism
Zoom courts and the birth of virtual justice: Rethinking how we do business in future courts.
With the unprecedented surge of Delta coronavirus cases, many courts had to curtail their operations and some courts had to halt their proceedings. However on a positive note, this disruption to traditional court setting is unmistakably a blessing in disguise and a much needed one to prompt the judiciary to streamline its arcane court procedures with state of the art technologies. According to legal futurist Richard Susskind, the future of legal profession will be increasingly transformational in this internet age and is likely to be replaced by increasingly capable systems with the help of artificial intelligence. The first time you hear this, it may sound weird, but if you think deep down how much the pandemic has changed our lives so far within just a matter of a year, it is not hard to imagine that future legal professionals will offer their practical expertise to their clients in a whole different way.
By Chamalee Semasinghe4 years ago in Futurism
How Colored Brain Works?
A colored brain is the genetic processing of the world around you. It is how you process, analyze, and perform tasks. It has four subdivisions based on the tasks they perform. These are the red brain (linear processing), the green brain (chaotic processing), the blue brain (intuitive processing), and the purple brain (relational processing). Hence, the colors are setting the difference.
By prickedinsight4 years ago in Futurism
How Deep Learning Can Help Predict Symptomatic Progression in Neurological Diseases Like Huntington's Disease.
My name is Zayden and I have a CAG of 43. I was passed down the gene by my mother Kelli, and have lost aunts, my grandfather, and now, soon, my mother to Huntington’s Disease. I am a computer programmer who works primarily in Python 3 to develop AI and Deep Learning models with Tensorflow, SciKitLearn, Numpy, and Pandas. I have 3 years of programming experience, with one year in AI and Deep Learning. Why should you care? Because I am helping develop projects with the University of Toronto that could help predict symptomatic progression in terminal neurological diseases like Huntington's Disease, Parkinson's, Alzheimer's, and ALS using Deep Learning models such as Recurrent Neural Networks to process speech patterns in Huntington's Disease patients that could help occupational and speech therapists better understand the link between progression of Huntington's Disease and speech difficulties, and hopefully even lead to better treatment and the prolonging the ability to speak in more advanced stages of the disease. I am also using standard Artificial Neural Network techniques such as Multiple Linear Regression, with multiple dense layers to process and predict symptomatic progression via patient protein levels in CSF (Cerebro-Spinal Fluid). It is definitely exciting and we are hoping to contribute something really awesome to neuroscience.
By Zayden King4 years ago in Futurism
Sophia First Human-like robot
Sophia, whose widespread appeal to robots is not in the best of plans but in her modified wrist and rolling back, has a disturbing, human-like appearance enhanced by the intricate ability to express emotions. New technologies have allowed the robot to create an amazing amount of human faces from scratch. According to the company, Sophia mimics the basic muscles of the human face that allow it to express expressions of joy, sadness, curiosity, confusion, thinking, sadness, frustration, and other emotions.
By Rashmi Dahal4 years ago in Futurism
Artificial Intelligence- Will it be our Future?
This article will present some thoughts on the status and the next years of AI evolution. Center stage are two dichotomies: (1) real AI applications vs. the public imagination, and (2) commercial AI systems vs. academic research ambitions. The status of AI is a bag of disparate models and the future may need to involve a fundamental redesign of the popular connectionist approach of neural networks with the logical approach of reasoning systems to achieve a higher degree of generality and fault-tolerance.
By Varun Khanchandani4 years ago in Futurism
Is AI A Threat To Mankind?
Building robots is impossible, but intelligent, very rich AI can be paid to manage more people to do their jobs. What worries us is that superhuman intelligence has been manipulated, such as the need for Internet robotic bodies, the need to defraud financial markets, to establish human researchers, to deceive human leaders, and to develop weapons that we do not yet understand. The erroneous notion of a "robot" implies the myth that machines cannot be controlled by humans. It is widely believed that intelligent beings, whether human or machine, are not good enough for humanity.
By Bikram Gaihre4 years ago in Futurism
What Role can Artificial Intelligence Play in Restaurants?
While technology continues to advance and aid many companies, others are still battling to stay afloat. The restaurant industry is one such industry that is fighting for survival among its rivals. There has been a substantial increase in the restaurant business regarding artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance operations, cut costs, and create a better experience for customers.
By Rahul singh4 years ago in Futurism









