Worcester Polytechnic Institute (WPI) researchers have used a form of artificial intelligence (AI) to analyze anatomical changes in the brain and predict Alzheimer's disease with nearly 93% accuracy.
The collapse of traditional career paths in tech isn’t a crisis for students but an opportunity. But opportunity only benefits those who act early. The biggest mistake you can make today is waiting ...
New research warns that popular deep learning systems trained for cancer pathology may be relying on hidden shortcuts rather than genuine biological signals. Artificial intelligence tools are ...
New Music Discovery Platform Combines Real-Time Listening Parties, NFT Collectibles, and Fan Investment Opportunities to Help Emerging Artists Build Sustainable Careers MIAMI, FL / ACCESS Newswire / M ...
The rapid development of artificial intelligence and autonomous systems makes it crucial to achieve high-precision, highly robust, and accurate real-time 3D perception, understanding, and intelligent ...
The second Society of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging (SNMMI) AI Summit, organized by the SNMMI AI Task Force, took ...
Those that solve artificially simplified problems where quantum advantage is meaningless. Those that provide no genuine quantum advantage when all costs are properly accounted for. This critique is ...
Oracle-based quantum algorithms cannot use deep loops because quantum states exist only as mathematical amplitudes in Hilbert space with no physical substrate. Criticall ...
Safe coding is a collection of software design practices and patterns that allow for cost-effectively achieving a high degree ...
A few months later, in the conflict of interest discussion, Hugo Roy confirmed he is a lawyer authorised to practise at the bar in Paris and employed by Baker McKenzie: ...
The high‑profile case arose against a backdrop of increasing scrutiny of alleged misuse of Strategic Lawsuits Against Public Participation (“SLAPPs”) to deter legitimate investigative reporting. The ...
Mar. 4, 2026 A new ultrathin photodetector from Duke University can sense light across the entire electromagnetic spectrum and generate a signal in just 125 picoseconds, making it the fastest ...