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Archive for the ‘education’ category: Page 29

Sep 17, 2023

AI Can Already Design Better Cities Than Humans, Study Shows

Posted by in categories: education, health, robotics/AI, transportation

Imagine living in a cool, green city flush with parks and threaded with footpaths, bike lanes, and buses, which ferry people to shops, schools, and service centers in a matter of minutes.

That breezy dream is the epitome of urban planning, encapsulated in the idea of the 15-minute city, where all basic needs and services are within a quarter of an hour’s reach, improving public health and lowering vehicle emissions.

Artificial intelligence could help urban planners realize that vision faster, with a new study from researchers at Tsinghua University in China demonstrating how machine learning can generate more efficient spatial layouts than humans can, and in a fraction of the time.

Sep 15, 2023

Quantum information science is rarely taught in high school — here’s why that matters

Posted by in categories: education, quantum physics, science

A former physics teacher says America could lose its technological edge if it doesn’t do a better job of teaching quantum information science – starting in high school.

Sep 15, 2023

How AI Could Save (Not Destroy) Education | Sal Khan | TED

Posted by in categories: business, education, robotics/AI

Sal Khan, the founder and CEO of Khan Academy, thinks artificial intelligence could spark the greatest positive transformation education has ever seen. He shares the opportunities he sees for students and educators to collaborate with AI tools — including the potential of a personal AI tutor for every student and an AI teaching assistant for every teacher — and demos some exciting new features for their educational chatbot, Khanmigo.

If you love watching TED Talks like this one, become a TED Member to support our mission of spreading ideas: https://ted.com/membership.

Continue reading “How AI Could Save (Not Destroy) Education | Sal Khan | TED” »

Sep 14, 2023

The Universe: New Evidence of Parallel Worlds (S3, E2) | Full Episode

Posted by in categories: cosmology, education, physics

Some of the world’s leading physicists believe they have found startling new evidence showing the existence of universes other than our own. See more in Season 3, Episode 2, “Parallel Universes.”

#TheUniverse.

Continue reading “The Universe: New Evidence of Parallel Worlds (S3, E2) | Full Episode” »

Sep 13, 2023

How Elon Musk set Tesla on a new course for self-driving

Posted by in categories: education, Elon Musk, robotics/AI, transportation

Tesla’s latest version of FSD had taught itself how to drive by processing billions of frames of video of how humans do it, Isaacson writes.

Sep 12, 2023

UBIK — Take As Directed!

Posted by in category: education

The ultimate answer to the supply chain issue.


A school project for motion graphics, put together several of the product advertisements found in Philip K Dick’s 1969 sci-fi novel into a full 1m commercial. Aimed for surrealism.

Sep 11, 2023

Making life friendlier with personal robots

Posted by in categories: bioengineering, education, robotics/AI

“As a child, I wished for a robot that would explain others’ emotions to me” says Sharifa Alghowinem, a research scientist in the Media Lab’s Personal Robots Group (PRG). Growing up in Saudi Arabia, Alghowinem says she dreamed of coming to MIT one day to develop Arabic-based technologies, and of creating a robot that could help herself and others navigate a complex world.

In her early life, Alghowinem faced difficulties with understanding social cues and never scored well on standardized tests, but her dreams carried her through. She earned an undergraduate degree in computing before leaving home to pursue graduate education in Australia. At the Australian National University, she discovered affective computing for the first time and began working to help AI detect human emotions and moods, but it wasn’t until she came to MIT as a postdoc with the Ibn Khaldun Fellowship for Saudi Arabian Women, which is housed in the MIT Department of Mechanical Engineering, that she was finally able to work on a technology with the potential to explain others’ emotions in English and Arabic. Today, she says her work is so fun that she calls the lab “my playground.”

Alghowinem can’t say no to an exciting project. She found one with great potential to make robots more helpful to people by working with Jibo, a friendly robot companion developed by the founder of the Personal Robots Group (PRG) and the social robot startup Jibo Inc., MIT Professor and Dean for Digital Learning Cynthia Breazeal’s research explores the potential for companion robots to go far beyond assistants who obey transactional commands, like requests for the daily weather, adding items to shopping lists, or controlling lighting. At the MIT Media Lab, the PRG team designs Jibo to make him an insightful coach and companion to advance social robotics technologies and research. Visitors to the MIT Museum can experience Jibo’s charming personality.

Sep 11, 2023

OpenAI wants teachers to use ChatGPT for education

Posted by in categories: education, robotics/AI

Head over to our on-demand library to view sessions from VB Transform 2023. Register Here

It’s not only programming, journalism and content moderation that OpenAI is seeking to revolutionize with the use of its landmark large language models (LLMs) GPT-3, GPT-3.5 and GPT-4.

Today, the company published a new blog post titled “Teaching with AI” that outlines examples of six educators from various countries, mostly at the university level though one teaches high school, using ChatGPT in their classrooms.

Sep 10, 2023

This MIT Propeller Is Going To Change Aviation Forever

Posted by in categories: education, media & arts, transportation

Came across this. Any aviation fans? MIT does it again but this time with propellers.


Hope you all enjoy it.
Dont forget to subscribe and give a thumbs up.

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Sep 9, 2023

AI+Education Summit: Generative AI for Education

Posted by in categories: education, robotics/AI

How will AI models that can generate text, images, audio, video and code change what students need to learn and the instructional processes that guide their learning? Do we need generative models designed specifically for educational purposes?

Speakers.
Dora Demszky: Assistant Professor of Education Data Science, Stanford University.
Noah Goodman: Associate Professor of Psychology, of Computer Science and by courtesy of Linguistics, Stanford University.
Percy Liang: Director, Center for Research on Foundation Models; Associate Professor of Computer Science, Stanford University.
Rob Reich: Professor of Political Science; Faculty Director, McCoy Family Center for Ethics in Society; Marc and Laura Andreessen Faculty Co-Director, Stanford Center on Philanthropy and Civil Society; Associate Director, Stanford HAI

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