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AI recap: The rise of the prompt engineer and biased driverless cars

New Scientist

Our round-up of the most interesting artificial intelligence news in August includes a job created by AI, the problem of racial bias in driverless cars and how robots are better at 'are you a robot?' tests than humans

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Frontiers publishing partnerships update –?spring 2023 

Frontiers

Welcome from Robyn Mugridge, Head of Publishing Partnerships As our community of publishing partners grows, we are pleased to welcome you to our new Frontiers publishing partnerships quarterly round-up. Explore the inaugural hubs on organoid intelligence for biocomputing and the future of evolutionary medicine.

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Diagnostic AI algorithm focuses on privacy protection

Physics World

Artificial intelligence (AI) techniques are increasingly employed for biomedical data analysis, for applications such as helping clinicians detect cancers in medical images, for example. Kaissis and collaborators, also from OpenMined and Imperial College London , publish their findings in Nature Machine Intelligence.

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Blue plaque unveiled in honour of remarkable Hungarian-born polymer scientist Andrew Keller

Physics World

As a student at the University of Budapest in 1943, Keller himself was rounded up and forced to work for a Jewish labour battalion. In what sounds like a movie plot, he escaped, hiding in a haybarn, only to be later pick up by the Russians. Alan Windle remembers Andrew Keller Alan Windle remembers Andrew Keller.

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Allergy Season isn’t Really ‘Seasonal’ Anymore: Here’s Why

Breezometer

However, this is not necessarily the case - let’s explore why our traditional understanding of global pollen ‘seasons’ no longer really measures up. As higher CO 2 concentrations in the atmosphere make our planet heat up over time, leading to warmer winters and earlier springs, some plants start their pollen production earlier in the year.

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Falling Walls 2023: How open science and systems thinking can save the planet 

Frontiers

Now it’s time to pull up our sleeves and get serious. The theme of accelerating solutions for the most effective mitigation and adaptation strategy, developed in the Climate Action Future plenary table was picked up and further developed during the Planetary Boundary Science: Advancing Science to Save the Planet round table later that day.

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Optical chipmaker focuses on high-performance computing

Physics World

In 2018 we assembled a team of 15 employees and the company got its first round of funding. In 2019 Lightelligence produced its first optical artificial intelligence (AI) accelerator demo called COMET, which was able to accurately recognize handwritten digits. 000 – and conventional computers cannot keep up with this.