Latest from MIT Tech Review – The future of generative AI is niche, not generalized

The relentless hype surrounding generative AI in the past few months has been accompanied by equally loud anguish over the supposed perils — just look at the open letter calling for a pause in AI experiments. This tumult risks blinding us to more immediate risks — think sustainability and bias — and clouds our ability…

Latest from MIT Tech Review – EmTech Digital begins May 2

EmTech Digital, MIT Technology Review’s signature AI conference, is May 2-3, 2023. This year’s event looks at the game-changing power of generative AI, the technology, and the legal implications of generated content. Leaders from OpenAI, Google, Meta, NVIDIA, and more are expected to discuss the future of AI. Join in-person on the MIT campus or online…

Latest from Google AI – Robust and efficient medical imaging with self-supervision

Posted by Shekoofeh Azizi, Senior Research Scientist, and Laura Culp, Senior Research Engineer, Google Research Despite recent progress in the field of medical artificial intelligence (AI), most existing models are narrow, single-task systems that require large quantities of labeled data to train. Moreover, these models cannot be easily reused in new clinical contexts as they…

Latest from Google AI – LayerNAS: Neural Architecture Search in Polynomial Complexity

Posted by Yicheng Fan and Dana Alon, Software Engineers, Google Research Every byte and every operation matters when trying to build a faster model, especially if the model is to run on-device. Neural architecture search (NAS) algorithms design sophisticated model architectures by searching through a larger model-space than what is possible manually. Different NAS algorithms,…

Latest from MIT Tech Review – A Cambridge Analytica-style scandal for AI is coming

Can you imagine a car company putting a new vehicle on the market without built-in safety features? Unlikely, isn’t it? But what AI companies are doing is a bit like releasing race cars without seatbelts or fully working brakes, and figuring things out as they go.  This approach is now getting them in trouble. For…