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AI Yet to Master Boardgame 'Go'

The Chinese game of Go has proven to be a tough challenge to those in the artificial intelligence field.  Advanced AI has been developed for many other games, with perhaps the most famous being chess. However, Go is in ... Read more

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Evolving Artwork Generated by Distributed System

The Electric sheep open-source screensaver utilizes a network of 60,000 computers to render frames of an ever changing collection of fractal-based animations. A genetic algorithm is employed to ensure that no two animations are the same and that desirable visuals ... Read more

TORCS: AI Racing Game

Description TORCS (The Open Racing Car Simulator) is a highly portable multi platform car racing simulation. It is used as ordinary car racing game, as AI racing game and as research platform. It runs on Linux (x86, AMD64 and PPC), FreeBSD, Ma... Read more

Annual Turing Test Challenges

There are presently two major chatterbot contests which utilize the Turing Test as the determinant - the bot which most closely comes to passing (or does pass) the Turing Test is deemed the winner. These two contests, the Loebner Prize ... Read more

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Bioloid: Highly Configurable Robot

Since being released a couple years ago, the Bioloid hobbyist robot has quickly grown in popularity due to its incredible versatility. Available in several kits of varying complexity, the robot is capable of being programmed and physically configured to ... Read more


The Blue Brain: Artificial Mind
(1 vote, average 4.00 out of 5)
Written by Robert Riley   
Friday, 17 July 2009 06:00

Highlights from The Wall Street Journal:

blue-brain-smallFor the last four years, Henry Markram has been building a biologically accurate artificial brain. Powered by a supercomputer, his software model closely mimics the activity of a vital section of a rat's gray matter.

Dubbed Blue Brain, the simulation shows some strange behavior. The artificial "cells" respond to stimuli and suddenly pulse and flash in spooky unison, a pattern that isn't programmed but emerges spontaneously.

Read more...
 
BrainHacking
(1 vote, average 4.00 out of 5)
Written by Robert Riley   
Tuesday, 14 July 2009 05:57

From Wired.com:

homer-brain-smallHackers who commandeer your computer are bad enough. Now scientists worry that someday, they’ll try to take over your brain.

In the past year, researchers have developed technology that makes it possible to use thoughts to operate a computer, maneuver a wheelchair or even use Twitter — all without lifting a finger. But as neural devices become more complicated — and go wireless — some scientists say the risks of “brain hacking” should be taken seriously.

Read more...
 
Robot Teaches Itself to Smile
Written by Robert Riley   
Saturday, 11 July 2009 05:39

Highlights from Wired.com:

einstein-robot-smallA robot has taught itself to smile, frown, and make other human facial expressions using machine learning.

To get the incredibly realistic Einstein robot to make facial expressions, researchers used to have to program each of its 31 artificial muscles individually through trial and error. Now, computer scientists from the Machine Perception Laboratory at the University of California, San Diego have used machine learning to enable the robot to learn expressions on its own.

Read more...
 
The Robot that Navigates Like a Person
Written by Robert Riley   
Thursday, 09 July 2009 05:34

Highlights from MIT Technology Review:

generic-robot-smallEuropean researchers have developed a robot capable of moving autonomously using humanlike visual processing. The robot is helping the researchers explore how the brain responds to its environment while the body is in motion. What they discover could lead to machines that are better able to navigate through cluttered environments.

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Open Source Machine Learning Compiler Released
(1 vote, average 4.00 out of 5)
Written by Robert Riley   
Tuesday, 07 July 2009 05:24

From an IBM Press Release:

ibm-smallIBM today announced the public availability of Milepost GCC, the world's first open source machine learning compiler. The compiler intelligently optimizes applications, translating directly into shorter software development times and bigger performance gains.

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Video: Mobile Intelligence
Written by Robert Riley   
Sunday, 05 July 2009 06:17

In this video Jamais Cascio talks about Mobile Intelligence (”Your Brain’s Future, Mobilized”). This is about the Augmented Future: augmented awareness, augmented society, augmented environments… He sketches 3 possible futures: participatory, interconnected and leapfrog - all with different features and also why it is matters to be aware of this.

 
First Electronic Quantum Processor Created
Written by Robert Riley   
Friday, 03 July 2009 06:23

From Physorg.com:

qubit-smallThe two-qubit processor is the first solid-state quantum processor that resembles a conventional computer chip and is able to run simple algorithms.

They also used the two-qubit superconducting chip to successfully run elementary algorithms, such as a simple search, demonstrating quantum information processing with a solid-state device for the first time. Their findings will appear in Nature's advanced online publication June 28.

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Robot Opens Doors, Plug Itself In
Written by Robert Riley   
Wednesday, 01 July 2009 05:40

Highlights from the New York Times::

wg-pr2-smallWillow Garage, a Silicon Valley robotics research group, said that its experimental PR2 robot, which has wheels and can travel at speeds up to a mile and a quarter per hour, was able to open and pass through 10 doors and plug itself into 10 standard wall sockets in less than an hour. In a different test, the same robot completed a marathon in the company’s office, traveling 26.2 miles. PR2 will not compete with humans yet; it took more than four days.

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Mind Views Tools as Part of the Body
Written by Robert Riley   
Monday, 29 June 2009 12:27

From The New Scientist:

tools-smallWhen you brush your teeth, the toothbrush may actually become part of your arm – at least as far as your brain is concerned. That's the conclusion of a study showing perceptions of arm length change after people handle a mechanical tool.

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$1 Million Netflix Competition Won..?
(2 votes, average 4.50 out of 5)
Written by Singular   
Sunday, 28 June 2009 05:30
From The New York Times:

netflix_logoAfter nearly three years and entries from more than 50,000 contestants, a multinational team says that it has met the requirements to win the million-dollar Netflix Prize: It developed powerful algorithms that improve the movie recommendations made by Netflix’s existing software by more than 10 percent.

Read more...
 
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