AI, Geoffrey Hinton

AI has the tendency to “hallucinate,” or make up information that it thinks is real—and even seems legitimate, or plausible.
Emerge's Person of the Year Yann LeCun’s opposition to AI fearmongering drives his vision for the future of artificial ...
Conference on Neural Information Processing Systems (NeurIPS) in Vancouver, a hub for groundbreaking developments in AI, ...
A biologist hid 350 audio monitors across Costa Rica’s tropical rainforests to spy on endangered spider monkeys in order to ...
Artificial intelligence wastes an extraordinary amount of energy - but running every computer calculation twice, first ...
Meta is the world’s standard bearer for open-weight AI. In a fascinating case study in corporate strategy, while rivals like ...
Explore how Ingram Micro combines AI and human intelligence to streamline operations, boost productivity and drive innovation ...
Our tech columnist visits a doctor assisted by AI. He finds potential and worrisome questions about whether it’s accurate, ...
Microsoft's AI for Good Lab this morning unveiled a new open-source project and AI-powered edge computing device designed to ...
Deep in the cavernous convention center here, on math-filled posters or in spirited conversations, could be a breakthrough for artificial intelligence in the making. More than 16,000 computer ...
An AI model that understands the interplay between human body language, speech and emotion enables digital avatars to move ...