Timeline of computing 2020–present
(Redirected from 2023 in computing)
History of computing |
---|
Hardware |
Software |
Computer science |
Modern concepts |
By country |
Timeline of computing |
Glossary of computer science |
This article presents a detailed timeline of events in the history of computing from 2020 to the present. For narratives explaining the overall developments, see the history of computing.
2023 in science |
---|
Fields |
Technology |
Social sciences |
Paleontology |
Extraterrestrial environment |
Terrestrial environment |
Other/related |
Significant events in computing include events relating directly or indirectly to software, hardware and wetware. Mostly[clarification needed] excluded are:
- events in general robotics
- events about uses of computational tools in biotechnology and similar fields (except for improvements to the underlying computational tools) as well as events in media-psychology except when those are directly linked to computational tools
Currently excluded are:
- events in computer insecurity/hacking incidents/breaches/Internet conflicts/malware if they aren't also about milestones towards computer security
- events about quantum computing and communication
- economic events and events of new technology policy beyond standardization
2023[edit]
Software-hardware systems[edit]
- A two/multi-robot and beacons mesh communication paradigm for exploration by robotic probes, drones, spacecraft, disaster recovery rovers or underwater robots was reported.[1][2]
- Researchers showed parrots can and enjoy using a videocalling system.[3][4]
- A 'chef' robot developed is trained to watch and learn from cooking videos, and recreate dishes itself.[5][6]
- Autonomous drones won first races against human champions of FPV drone racing.[7]
- Notable innovations: a low-cost open source air pollution sensor (Flatburn)[8][9] and a laser-using drone-based methane plume localization method.[10][11]
Software[edit]
- Researchers showed that, or how, pre-installed apps on Android smartphones in China are used for mass surveillance in China.[12][13]
- Scientists reviewed safety-by-design technology- and policy-based approaches to ensure biosafety and biosecurity to prevent engineered pathogen pandemics, including digital methods such as DNA sequence screening, some of which are already implemented and part of regulations to some degree.[14][additional citation(s) needed]
- Studies investigated dating apps, revealing high gender inequality,[15] partly exploring possible relevance to the rise of both "sexual loneliness" and concentration of sex in various developed countries,[15] and reported subsets of well-being effects.[16][15][17][18]
- A study hypothesized mental health awareness efforts (in current forms) or glamorised and romanticised mental disorders on social media (e.g. quotes about depression on aesthetically-appealing backgrounds shared widely on certain social media)[which?] may have contributed to the recent rise in reported mental health problems – by intensifying and over-diagnosing of such – beyond e.g. increased reporting of previously under-recognised symptoms or mental health-related issues.[19][20]
- A news outlet reported on a systematic study of major issues in popular currently available commercial VPNs for Internet privacy and security.[21][22]
- Researchers reported 'digital resignation', calling for regulations and education reform.[23]
- Parts of Twitter's recommender algorithms became open source, welcomed and requested by many albeit with several issues related to code exclusion and verifiability.[24][25][26] Around the time, the free version of its API, which was also used for research, esd shut down[27] – followed shortly thereafter by reddit,[28] proprietary verification checkmarks caused controversy,[29] parts of its source code were leaked,[30] and applications of a "state-affiliated media" label – which purportedly uses "Category:Publicly funded broadcasters" data which, like the label, does not differentiate and list the shares of funding sources – caused controversy.[31][32] In April, Twitter was warned by EU digital policy-makers after a report indicated its recent policies "boost" Russian disinformation-based propaganda.[33]
- One of the first empirical studies on what real users are shown during their typical use of popular Web search engines interpreted its results to show that choices for unreliable news sources for their queries are driven primarily by users' own choices and less by the engine's algorithms. The Web scientists linked their findings to the concept of filter bubbles which emphasizes the role of design-[34] and personalization algorithms.[35][36] A report accompanied by an open letter concluded that Alphabet Inc, against its voluntary promises, still runs climate misinformation ads.[37] Statements by Elon Musk[better source needed] in 2022 suggested YouTube may also show ethically disputed advertising other than science-related misinformation such as extensively showing "scam ads".[38][39][40]
- Notable innovations: a Tor browser-equivalent Web browser for privacy-protected browsing when using a VPN (Mullvad browser) was demonstrated,[41][42][43] after moderators of the Web content aggregation-based platform Reddit strike against the site's introduction of API pricing and the ensuing closing of several mobile client apps, several novel decentralized open source aggregation platforms gain substantial numbers of users – most notably Lemmy and Kbin which can synchronize their posts via interoperability,[44][45][46] the first upgrade of the Global Earthquake Model data for disaster risk reduction is reported.[47][48]
AI software[edit]
- News outlets reported on a preprint that described the development of a large language model software that can answer medical questions with a 67.6% accuracy on MedQA and nearly matched human clinician performance when answering open-ended medical questions, Med-PaLM. The AI makes use of comprehension-, recall of knowledge-, and medical reasoning-algorithms but remains inferior to clinicians.[50][51][52] As of 2023, humans often – if not most often – conduct query-based web searches, read websites and/or conduct physical doctor's visits to inquire health information, despite various difficulties,[53][54][55][56] partly as they typically did not undergo any formal training in media literacy,[57] digital literacy[58][59] or health literacy,[60] as such is not part of schools curricula in most education systems as of 2023.[60][57][58]
- A novel potentially significantly more efficient text-to-image approach, as implemented in MUSE, was reported.[61][62]
- A first successful autonomous long-duration operation, including simulated combat, of a modified F-16 fighter jet, X-62A, by two AI software was reported.[63][64][65]
- A text-to-speech synthesizer, VALL-E, that can be trained to mimic anybody's voice with just three seconds of voice data and may produce the most natural-sounding results to date, was reported in a preprint.[66][67]
- A use of world models for a wide range of domains that make decisions using e.g. different 3D worlds and reward frequencies and outperforms previous approaches, DreamerV3, was reported as a step towards general artificial intelligence in a preprint.[68][69]
- A large language model, ProGen, that can generate functional protein sequences with a predictable function, with input including tags specifying protein properties, was reported.[70][71]
- A deep-learning model, ZFDesign, for zinc finger design for any genomic target for gene- and epigenetic-editing was reported.[72][73]
- Software for generating 3D dynamic scenes (text-to-4D), MAV3D, was reported.[74][75]
- A study reported the development of deep learning algorithms to identify technosignature candidates, finding 8 potential alien signals not detected earlier.[76][77]
- Chatbot and text-generating AI, ChatGPT (released on 30 Nov 2022), a large language model, became popular, with some considering the large public's attention as unwarranted hype as potential applications are limited. Similar software such as Cleverbot existed for many years, and the software is, on the fundamental level, not structured toward accuracy – e.g. providing seemingly credible but incorrect answers to queries and operating "without a contextual understanding of the language" – but only toward essentially the authenticity of mimicked human language.[78][79][80][81][82] It was estimated that only two months after its launch, it had 100 million active users.[83] Applications may include solving or supporting school writing assignments,[84] malicious social bots (e.g. for misinformation, propaganda, and scams),[85][86] and providing inspiration (e.g. for artistic writing or in design or ideation in general).[87][88]
- An international norms and arms control proposal for artificial intelligence in the military (such as LAWs and weapons decision-making), the "Political Declaration on Responsible Military Use of Artificial Intelligence and Autonomy", was published by the U.S. government.[89][90][91] The first international summit on military AI led to a joint unbinding statement by the U.S., China and other nations, with some external calls for starting negotiations on an internationally binding law or an enforcement-mechanisms-driven law.[92]
- The world's first COVID-19 drug designed by generative AI was approved for human use, with clinical trials expected to begin in China. The new drug, ISM3312, was developed by Insilico Medicine.[93]
- The LLM GPT-4 was launched by OpenAI.[94][95] It and ChatGPT based on it continued to receive major global media attention.
- Researchers suggested that growing influence of industry in AI research means that "public interest alternatives for important AI tools may become increasingly scarce".[96]
- Google revealed PaLM-E, an embodied multimodal language model with 562 billion parameters.[97][98]
- Google released chatbot Bard due to effects of the ChatGPT release,[99] with potential for integration into its Web search and, like ChatGPT software, also as a software development helper tool.[100] DuckDuckGo released the DuckAssist feature integrated into its search engine that summarizes information from Wikipedia to answer search queries that are questions. The experimental feature was shut down without explanation on 12 April.[101][102][103] There has been further development regarding LLMs or ChatGPT as user interfaces of Wikipedia or as software using its structured knowledge by others.[104][105] A proprietary feature by scite.ai was released that delivered answers that use research papers and provide citations for the quoted paper(s). It may demonstrate an alternative approach to ChatGPT whose fundamental algorithms are not designed to generate text that is true, including for example "hallucinations" and fake citations or misinformation more generally.[106][107] Elicit.org may provide a free alternative to this tool.[108][109] A broader alternative approach to the software's Q&A applications and use of text generation for assignments may be the improvement of media literacy and Web search skills in education systems.
- A method for editing NeRF scenes, a novel media technique from 2020,[110] with natural language commands was demonstrated by Nvidia.[111][112]
- An open letter "Pause Giant AI Experiments" initiated by the Future of Life Institute called for "AI labs to immediately pause for at least 6 months the training of AI systems more powerful than GPT-4" due to "profound risks to society and humanity".[113][114] It received substantial media attention and also contributed to speculations about perceived large LLM potential). At the time there was extensive media coverage of views that regard ChatGPT as a potential step towards AGI or sentient machines, also extending to some academic works (e.g. a popular preprint by a company).[49] The coverage focused on such views may not represent the majority expert views and, for example, some researchers noted that e.g. the ability to generate coherent text and imitations are not the same as understanding language.[115] A set of techniques under development included self-refining code or text.[116]
- ChatGPT was shown to outperform human doctors in responding to online medical questions when measured on quality and empathy by "a team of licensed health care professionals",[117][118] albeit the chatbot may have previously been trained with these reddit question and answers threads.
- Further LLM developments during what has been called an "AI boom" included: local or open source versions of LLaMA which was leaked in March,[119][120][121] news outlets reported on GPT4-based Auto-GPT that given natural language commands uses the Internet and other tools in attempts to understand and achieve its tasks with unclear or so-far little practicality,[122] a systematic evaluation of answers from four "generative search engines" suggested their outputs "appear informative, but frequently contain unsupported statements and inaccurate citations",[123] a multi-modal open source tool for understanding and generating speech,[124] a data scientist argued that "researchers need to collaborate to develop open-source LLMs that are transparent" and independent,[125] Stability AI launched an open source LLM.[126]
- Researchers demonstrated an open source 'AI scientist' that can create models of natural phenomena from knowledge axioms and experimental data, showing the software can rediscover physical laws like "Kepler's third law of planetary motion, Einstein’s relativistic time-dilation law, and Langmuir's theory of adsorption" using logical reasoning and a few data points.[128][127]
- Researchers demonstrated a non-invasive brain-reading method. It can translate a person's neural activity into a continuous stream of text using fMRI data and transformer machine learning. Prior training data is required for this semantic decoding. Participants listened to stories for 16 hours while their brain activity was recorded.[129]
- A new AI algorithm developed by Baidu was shown to boost the antibody response of COVID-19 mRNA vaccines by 128 times.[130]
- Computational neuroscientists showed that people with higher intelligence scores in HCP cognitive tests took more time to solve difficult problems and that their higher synchrony between brain areas allowed for better integration of evidence (or progress) from preceding working memory sub-problem processing. Reducing synchrony in "avatar" simulations, that were adjusted and tuned towards personalization, "led decision-making circuits to quickly jump to conclusions". Their codified results may be useful for an understanding of cognition to replicate or imitate in bio-inspired computing.[132][131]
- AI was used to develop an experimental antibiotic called abaucin, which is shown to be effective against A. baumannii.[133]
- A machine learning model is trained to recognise the key features of chemicals with senolytic activity. It finds three chemicals – ginkgetin, periplocin and oleandrin – able to remove senescent cells without damaging healthy cells.[134][135]
- Articles in science outlets like Nature suggest contemporary viral concerns about hypothetical existential risk of AI "plays into the tech companies' agenda" – partly in the form of 'criti-hype'[136] – and that this "hinders effective regulation of the societal harms AI is causing right now" and in the near-future.[137]
- A science writer provides an overview of "the nascent industry of AI-designed drugs".[138]
- A preprint introduces the concept of "thought cloning" by which AI use data of or imitate human thinking.[139]
- Metaresearchers showed that AI trained with study-author-networks data could generate scientifically promising "alien" hypotheses that would likely not be considered otherwise.[140]
- A study provides an overview and living review of open source LLMs, assessing the levels of openness of their differentiated elements and reviewing the risks of relying on proprietary software or the importance of open source AI.[141]
- AI-supported mammography screening was demonstrated to have the potential to substantially reduce workload and to possibly improve cancer detection rates.[142]
- A review outlined applications and challenges of using AI to accelerate science.[143]
- A study that won an international competition demonstrated an approach that predicted 70% of earthquakes, suggesting some form of earthquake prediction may be feasible in the future.[144]
- Researchers released a large set of audiobooks for free books in Project Gutenberg created automatically via generative AI with near-natural voice.[145]
- A natural language system was demonstrated that can provide explanations for the conclusion-making of machine learning models for explainable AI.[146][147]
- Notable innovation products: an open source automated experimentation science platform (BacterAI) for predicting microbial metabolism with little data,[148] a low-cost smartphone-attachment (BPClip) for blood pressure measurement,[149] an open source transfer learning-based system (Geneformer) for predicting how networks of interconnected human genes control or affect the function of cells,[150][151] a performant open source AI software for protein design (RFdiffusion) was introduced,[152] multimodal biomedical Med-PaLM M was introduced.[153]
Hardware and wetware[edit]
- Researchers demonstrated an open-brain surgery-free brain implant, Stentrode, that can record brain activity from a nearby blood vessel, showing it can be used to operate a computer.[154][155]
- News outlets reported on a study (21 Nov. 2022) demonstrating locust antennae implanted as biosensors into (bio-hybrid) robots for AI-interpreted machine olfaction.[156][157]
- Scientists coalesced recent developments brain organoids into a new field they term organoid intelligence (OI), seeking to harness OI for computing – as a novel type of AI – in an ethically responsible way. Networks of such miniature tissues could become functional using stimulus-response training or organoid-computer interfaces – to potentially become "more powerful than silicon-based computing" for a range of tasks – and could also be used for research of various pathophysiologies, brain development, human learning, memory and intelligence, and new therapeutic approaches against brain diseases.[158][159] using human
- Biological organoid intelligence, 'Brainoware', was demonstrated to solve computational tasks in a preprint, with implications for bioethics and potential bottlenecks and limits of nonbio-AI.[160][161]
- A study demonstrated functional integration of a magnetically steered microbot containing neurons, 'Mag-Neurobot', in a mouse "organotypic hippocampal slice" as physical (semi-) artificial neurons.[162][163]
- Researchers reported the development of a fuel cell implant powered by blood glucose. It can also release insulin at certain levels and have enough energy to allow smartphone implant control.[164][165]
- Researchers reported the development of neuromorphic AI hardware using nanowires physically mimicking the brain's activity in identifying and remembering an image from memory.[167][168] A university reported on a demonstration of multisensory motion cue integration by a neuromorphic nerve for robots.[166]
- Researchers demonstrated encoding and storing data – small images – as DNA without new DNA synthesis by recording light exposure into bacterial DNA via optogenetic circuits. The 'biological camera' extends chemical and electrical interface techniques.[169][170]
2022[edit]
Software-hardware systems[edit]
- The first laparoscopic surgery performed entirely by a robot was reported[image needed].[171][172]
- Researchers demonstrated semi-automated testing for reproducibility (which is lacking especially in cancer research) via extraction of statements about experimental results in non-semantic, gene expression cancer research papers and subsequent testing with breast cancer cell lines via robot scientist "Eve".[174][173]
- Agilicious, an open-source and open-hardware versatile standardized quadrotor drone, tailored toward agility, was released.[175][176]
- A university reported the release of 'Quad-SDK' which may be the first open source full-stack software for large agile four-legged robots, compatible with the ROS.[177][178][better source needed][179]
- News outlets reported deployment, research and development of novel military drone technology in the Russo-Ukrainian War in 2022, including demining drones,[180] self-repurposed commercial/hobby drones[181][182] (including via a hackathon),[183][better source needed][184] reconnaissance microdrones,[185] kamikaze drones, bomb-dropping modified drones,[186] and countermeasures such as electronic ones.[185][182][187][188]
- The first data transmission to exceed 1 petabit per second (Pbit/s) using a single laser and a single optical chip was demonstrated by European researchers.[189][190]
- News outlets reported a novel agricultural robot for viable weed control using lasers[image needed] or "laserweeding".[191] There are similar precision agriculture machines that have been reported before, also e.g. applying low amounts of herbicides and fertilizers with precision while mapping plant locations, in some cases autonomously.[192][193] Their benefits may include "healthier crops and soil, decreased herbicide use, and reduced chemical and labor costs".[191]
- A satellite-free GPS-alternative higher-resolution positioning system using existing telecommunications networks was demonstrated, SuperGPS.[194][195]
- Impossible Metals announced its first underwater robotic vehicle, 'Eureka 1', had completed its first trial of selectively harvesting polymetallic nodule rocks from the seabed nearly without harming the environment (as compared to other seabed mining) to help address the rising global need for metals for renewable energy system components – mainly batteries. It operates autonomously and uses advanced computer vision, e.g. using AI to determine which rocks have signs of visible life on them so that they are not harvested.[196]
Software[edit]
- A report by the Royal Society listed potential or proposed countermeasures against misinformation, mainly online misinformation, such as, broadly described, building resilience to scientific misinformation and a healthy online information environment.[197]
- Computational biologists reported the largest detailed human genetic genealogy, unifying human genomes from many sources for insights about human history, ancestry and evolution. It demonstrates a novel computational method for estimating how human DNA is related, in specific as a series of 13 million linked trees along the genome, a tree-sequence, which has also been called "the largest human family tree".[image needed][198][199][200]
- Researchers reported the creation of a version control system for cell engineering, suggesting it to be a "significant step toward more open, reproducible, easier to trace and share, more trustworthy engineering biology", and possibly increased safety by enabling faster tracing of organisms lab of origin and design details via barcoding.[201][202]
- A preprint demonstrated how backdoors can be placed undetectably into classifying (e.g. posts as "spam" or well-visible "not spam") machine learning models which are often developed and/or trained by third parties. Parties can change the classification of any input, including in cases with types of data/software transparency, possibly including white-box access.[203][204][205]
- Researchers reported routes for recycling 200 industrial waste chemicals into important drugs and agrochemicals using a software for computer-aided chemical synthesis design, helping enable "circular chemistry" as a potential area of a circular economy.[206][207]
- The first global, interactive AI- and satellite monitoring-based, map[image needed] and analysis of plastic waste sites to help prevention of plastic pollution, especially ocean pollution was published.[208][209]
- A study suggested that in children at age 9–12 during two years time, gaming or watching digital videos can be positively correlated with measures of intelligence, albeit correlations with overall screen time (including social media, socializing and TV) were not investigated and 'time gaming' did not differentiate between categories of video games (e.g. shares of games' platform and genre).[211][210]
- Computing and the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine:
An editorial published in a journal noted that remote surgery and types of videoconferencing for sharing expertise (e.g. ad hoc assistance) have been and could be used to support doctors in Ukraine.[212] A forum contribution analyzed Russian users' reactions to the Bucha massacre on social media – on nationalist Telegram channels.[213] Computer science and technology was also used to defend against the 2022 Russian invasion such as with military technology,[214][215] to document and communicate war events including via facial recognition of dead Russian soldiers and Russian war crimes,[216][217] and for aggregated information about support opportunities for Ukrainian scientists.[218][219] - Researchers demonstrated an MRI-ML-based approach that can diagnose early Alzheimer's disease with high accuracy and may help identify unknown related changes in the brain.[220][221]
- A study explored the efficacy of GitHub Sponsors, launched in 2019, in terms of supporting FOSS-efforts and the sponsors' intentions as well as the motivation of sponsors and various quantitative and qualitative analyses relevant to this approach of FOSS-funding.[222][223]
- Progress in climate change mitigation (CCM) living review-like works:
The living document-like aggregation, assessment, integration and review website Project Drawdown added 11 new CCM solutions to its organized set[image needed] of mitigation techniques.[224][225] The website's modeling framework was used in a study document to show that metal recycling has significant potential for CCM.[226] A revised or updated version, using computer models, of a major worldwide 100% renewable energy proposed plan and model was published.[227][228]
- Researchers reported the development of a deep learning system that learns intuitive physics from visual data (of virtual 3D environments) to some degree "from scratch" based on an unpublished approach inspired by studies of visual cognition in infants.[229][230] Two weeks later, other researchers reported the development of a machine learning algorithm that could discover sets of basic variables of various physical systems and predict the systems' future dynamics from video recordings of their behavior.[231][232]
- Researchers reported the development of deep learning software that can design proteins that contain prespecified functional sites.[233][234]
- DeepMind announced that its AlphaFold program had uncovered the structures of more than 200 million folded proteins, essentially all of those known to science.[235][236]
- A screening AI system for many cancer types that integrates different types of data via multimodal learning was reported.[237][238]
- News outlets reported that in July, for the first time, more people watched streaming TV than cable within the U.S.[globalize].[239][240]
- A researcher reported that the social media app TikTok adds a keylogger to its, on iOS essentially unavoidable, in-app browser in iOS, which allows its Chinese company to gather, for example, passwords, credit card details, and everything else that is typed into websites opened from taps on any external links within the app. Shortly after the report, the company claimed such capabilities are only used for debugging-types of purposes.[241][242] To date, it has largely not been investigated which and to which extent (other) apps have capacities for such or similar data-collection.[241][242][additional citation(s) needed]
- A university reported the development of a driver isolation framework to protect operating system kernels, primarily the monolithic Linux kernel which gets ~80,000 commits/year to its drivers,[image needed] from defects and vulnerabilities in device drivers,[243][244] with the Mars Research Group developers describing this lack of isolation as one of the main factors undermining kernel security.[245]
- A study concluded that advanced artificial intelligence with learned goal planning would or may intervene in the provision of reward to short-circuit reward via advanced exploits of ambiguity in the data about its goal such as considering the sending of the reward itself as humans' goal and intervening in the data-provision about its goal.[246][247]
- News outlets reported artificial intelligence art had won the first place in a digital art competition.[248] Such artistic imagery is generated using input consisting of text and sometimes images, usually including parameters such as artistic style (text-to-image generation). Around the time, an expert concluded that "AI art is everywhere right now", with even experts not knowing what it will mean,[249] a news outlet established that "AI-generated art booms" and reported issues of copyright and automation of professional artists,[250] a news outlet investigated how online communities (e.g. their rules) confronted with many such artworks react,[251] a news outlet raised concerns over deepfakes,[252] a magazine highlighted possibilities of enabling "new forms of artistic expression",[253] and an editorial noted that it may be seen as a welcome "augmentation of human capability".[254][additional citation(s) needed] Moreover, additional functionalities – such as enabling the use of user-provided concepts (like an object or a style) learned from few images for novel personalized art generated from the associated word/s[255] or expanding beyond the borders of artistic images in the same style[256] – were reported. On 22 August,[257][258] Stable Diffusion released as open source software, making the technology more accessible and free to use on personal hardware as well as extendable by third-parties (i.e. other software projects).[258][259]
- A new deep learning technique enabled year-round measurements of sea ice thickness in the Arctic.[260][261]
- A research report by NewsGuard indicated there is a high level of online misinformation delivered[image needed] – to a mainly young user base – with TikTok, whose usage is increasing.[262][263]
- The second largest cryptocurrency, Ethereum, switched from the proof-of-work (electricity consumption for validation) to the proof-of-stake (staked holdings for validation) algorithm, which cuts its large electricity consumption.[264]
- Results of investigations about the issue of recommendation systems shifting their users' preferences "so they are easier to satisfy" were reported, including actively optimizing such software to avoid problematic shifts/manipulation, suggesting "that recommenders that optimize for staying in the trust region can avoid manipulative behaviors while still generating engagement".[265][266]
- An open source platform to match genomically profiled cancer patients to precision medicine drug trials was reported.[267][268]
- After domain seizures of Z-Library by copyright law enforcement and moves toward dark web and IPFS technologies by its content providers, the open source shadow library UI Anna's Archive – which also provides access to a full copy of Z-Library content and scientific articles – was established by a team of archivists,[269][270] essentially providing the largest human book and literature library.
- News outlets reported the development of a post-editing model using GPT-3 that improves machine translations after identification of current translation problems.[271][272]
- The largest global inventory and interactive map of greenhouse gas emission sources was released by Climate TRACE (9 November).[273][274]
- Around the acquisition of Twitter by Elon Musk (27 October), interest in alternatives to the site – described as "one of the world's most high-profile information ecosystems", a contemporary suboptimal public square, and as heavily used by many journalists and news media – increased substantially. However, no alternative such as Mastodon, Reddit or the Bluesky protocol was found to match its features such as ease of use to date, in terms of being able to substitute the site.[275][276][277]
- Two studies demonstrated platform-built-in as well browser-integrated misinformation mitigation.[278][279][280]
- Researchers developed falsity scores for over 800 contemporary elites on Twitter and associated exposure scores.[281][282]
- News outlets reported the first fully self-supervised anti-money laundering AI software using contemporary suboptimal datasets, LaundroGraph.[283][284]
- A university reported on the first study of the new privacy-intrusion Web tracking technique of "UID smuggling" by the ad industry, which finds it to be prevalent and largely not mitigated by the latest protection tools – such as Firefox's tracking protection and uBlock Origin – and contributes to countermeasures.[285][286]
- Text-to-3D software became sophisticated, shortly after generative AI art. OpenAI released Point-E, a machine learning system that can generate 3D models from text prompts,[287][288] similar to previously released GET3D[289][290] and Magic3D[291] by Nvidia. DreamFusion from Google may also be notable.[289]
Hardware[edit]
- A logic gate for computation at femtosecond timescales was demonstrated.[292][293]
- A study estimated losses of 61 metals to help the development of circular economy strategies, showing that usespans of, often scarce, tech-critical metals are short.[294][295]
- [relevant?] Researchers reported a robotic finger covered in a type of manufactured living human skin.[296][297] Researchers demonstrated an electronic skin giving biological skin-like haptic sensations and touch/pain-sensitivity to a robotic hand.[298][299] A system of an electronic skin and a human-machine interface was reported that can enable remote sensed tactile perception, and wearable or robotic sensing of many hazardous substances and pathogens.[300][301] A multilayer tactile sensor hydrogel-based robot skin was demonstrated.[302][303]
- Samsung announced the first mass production of computer chips using a 3 nm process. These feature a gate-all-around transistor architecture that reduces power consumption by up to 45%, improves performance by 23% and reduces area by 16% compared to 5 nm.[304][305]
- Researchers reported the development of nanoscale brain-inspired artificial synapses, using the ion proton (H+
), for 'analog deep learning'.[306][307] - The creation of artificial neurons that can receive and release dopamine (chemical signals rather than electrical signals) and communicate with natural rat muscle and brain cells was reported, with potential for use in BCIs/prosthetics.[308][309]
- Scientists reported a so far unique and unknown feature of material VO2 – it can "remember" previous external stimuli (via structural rather than electronic states), with potential e.g. data storage.[310][311]
- Researchers reported the development of remote controlled cyborg cockroaches functional if moving to sunlight for recharging.[312][313]
- Researchers from the Max Planck Institute for Polymer Research reported an organic artificial spiking neuron[image needed] for in-situ sensing and biointerface that exhibits the signal diversity of biological neurons.[314][315]
2021[edit]
This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (April 2021) |
- [Meta/Policy/Philosophy] – Thomas Metzinger, a German philosopher of cognitive science and applied ethics, called for a "global moratorium on synthetic phenomenology" which, "until 2050", precautionarily bans "all research that directly aims at or knowingly risks the emergence of artificial consciousness on post-biotic carrier systems" – and could be gradually refined. The paper does not describe mechanisms of global enforcement of such proposed regulations which do not consider biotic or semi-biotic systems and aims to limit suffering risks.[316][317]
- [Type of database] – A new global food emissions database indicated that the current food systems are responsible for one third of the global anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions.[318][319]
- [Data usage] – In a static proprietary article that appeared in and was co-reviewed by a scientific journal, authenticated scientists analyzed data from multiple public databases to create a regional representation of levels of deforestation induced by nations' recent, largely unmodulated, trade-, production- and consumption-patterns.[320][321]
- A study found that carbon emissions from Bitcoin mining in China – where a majority of the proof-of-work algorithm that generates current economic value is computed, largely fueled by nonrenewable sources – had accelerated rapidly and would soon exceed total annual emissions of countries like Italy, interfering with climate change mitigation commitments.[322][323]
- Neuralink revealed a male macaque with chips embedded on each side of its brain, playing a mind-controlled version of Pong. While similar technology has been demonstrated for decades, and wireless implants have existed for years, some observers noted that the organization increased the number of implanted electrodes that are read wirelessly.[324][325][326]
- Scientists reviewed materials strategies for organic neuromorphic devices, suggesting that "their biocompatibility and mechanical conformability give them an advantage for creating adaptive biointerfaces, brain-machine interfaces, and biology-inspired prosthetics".[327][328][relevant?]
- Researchers published the first in-depth study of Web browser tab interfaces. They found that many people struggle with tab overload and conducted surveys and interviews about people's tab use. Thereby they formalized pressures for closing tabs and for keeping tabs open. The authors then developed related UI design considerations which could enable better tools and changes to the code of Web browsers – like Firefox – that allow knowledge workers and other users to better manage their tabs.[329][330]
- Operation of the U.S. Colonial Pipeline was interrupted by a ransomware cyber attack.[331]
- A new record for the smallest single-chip system was achieved, occupying a total volume of less than 0.1 mm³.[332][333]
- Scientists demonstrated the first brain–computer interface that decodes neural signals for handwriting. The character output speed of a patient with a paralyzed hand was up to 90 characters per minute – more than double the previous record. Each letter is associated with a highly distinctive pattern of activity in the brain, making it relatively easy for the algorithm to distinguish them.[334][335]
- Archivists initiated a rescue mission to secure enduring access to humanity's largest public library of scientific articles, Sci-Hub, due to the site's increased legal troubles, using Web and BitTorrent technologies.[336]
- Google demonstrated a research project called LaMDA, an automatic language generation system designed to sustain a conversation with a person on any topic.[337][338]
- The most comprehensive 3D map of the human brain – of a millionth of a brain and requiring 1.4 petabytes of storage space – was published.[339][340]
- El Salvador passed the Bitcoin Law, making it the first country to give cryptocurrency and bitcoin a status of legal tender.[341] The law was passed by the Legislative Assembly of El Salvador on June 8, 2021, giving the cryptocurrency bitcoin the status of legal tender within El Salvador after September 7, 2021.[342] It was proposed by President Nayib Bukele. The text of the law states that "the purpose of this law is to regulate bitcoin as unrestricted legal tender with liberating power, unlimited in any transaction, and to any title that public or private natural or legal persons require carrying out".[343]
- GitHub Copilot, a programmer assistant AI, was released.[344][345] Later FOSS variants of the tool included FauxPilot.[346]
- In the debate regarding the cognitive impacts of smartphones and digital technology, a group reported that, contrary to widespread belief, scientific evidence does not show that these technologies harm biological cognitive abilities and that they instead change predominant ways of cognition – such as a reduced need to remember facts or conduct mathematical calculations by pen and paper outside contemporary schools. However, some activities – like reading novels – that require long attention-spans and don't feature ongoing rewarding stimulation may become more challenging in general.[347][348]
- Open 3D Engine – a game engine that is free and open source software (FOSS) and has GNU/Linux support – was released.[349]
- Researchers used a brain–computer interface to enable a man who was paralyzed since 2003 to produce comprehensible words and sentences by decoding signals from electrodes in the speech areas of his brain.[350][351]
- Japan achieved a new world record Internet speed: 319 Tbit/s over ~3000 km which, albeit not being the fastest speed overall, beats the previous record of 178 Tbit/s.[352][353]
- Scientists reported that worldwide adolescent loneliness and depression increased substantially after 2012 and that loneliness in contemporary schools appears to be associated with smartphone access and Internet use.[354][355]
- DeepMind announced that its AlphaFold AI had predicted the structures of over 350,000 proteins, including 98.5% of the ~20,000 proteins in the human body. The 3D data along with their degrees of confidence for accuracy was made freely available with a database, doubling the previous number of protein structures in the public domain.[356]
- Scientists published the first complete neuron-level-resolution 3D map of a monkey brain which they scanned within 100 hours.[357][358]
- A researcher reported that solar superstorms would cause large-scale global months-long Internet outages. She described potential mitigation measures and exceptions – such as user-powered mesh networks and related peer-to-peer applications – and the robustness of the current Internet infrastructure.[359][360][361]
- Scientists concluded that personal carbon allowances (PCAs) could be a component of climate change mitigation. They found that the economic recovery from COVID-19 and novel digital technology capacities open a window of opportunity for first implementations. PCAs would consist of – e.g. monetary – credit-feedbacks and decreasing default levels of per capita emissions concessions. The researchers found that recent advances in machine learning technology and "smarter home and transport options make it possible to easily track and manage a large share of individuals' emissions" and that feedback effective in engaging individuals to reduce their energy-related emissions and relevant new personalized apps could be designed.[362][363][364] Issues may include privacy, evaluating emissions from individuals co-running multinational companies and the availability and prices of products and services.
- Cerebras announced a new hardware and software platform that can support AI models of 120 trillion parameters, enabling neural networks greater than the equivalent number of human brain synapses.[365]
- Pathogen researchers reported the development of machine learning models for genome-based early detection and prioritization of high-risk potential zoonotic viruses in animals prior to spillover to humans. They concluded that their tool could be used for virus surveillance for pandemic prevention via (i.a.) measures of "early investigation and outbreak preparedness" and would have been capable of predicting SARS-CoV-2 as a high-risk strain.[366][367]
- A loss of public IP routes to the Facebook DNS servers due to malfunctioning capacity-assessment code, routinely triggered after configuration changes of routers of the company's data centers, resulted in stoppage of BGP routing information broadcasts caused the 2021 Facebook outage.[368][369]
- A study of data traffic by popular smartphones running variants of the Android software found substantial by-default data collection and sharing with no opt-out (i.e. even the NetGuard firewall, which is not installed by default, may not reliably and completely prevent such data traffic) and implications for users' privacy, control and security.[370][371]
- Media outlets reported novel technologies for virtual try-ons of clothes for more sustainable fashion and improved online shopping, which increased relative to shopping at local shops that store clothes due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[372][373]
- A method of DNA data storage with 100 times the density of previous techniques was announced.[374]
- Scientists demonstrated that grown brain cells integrated into digital systems can carry out goal-directed tasks with performance-scores. In particular, playing a simulated (via electrophysiological stimulation) Pong which the cells learned to play faster than known machine intelligence systems, albeit to a lower skill-level than both AI and humans, was reported. Moreover, the study suggested it provides the "first empirical evidence" of information-processing capacity differences between neurons from different species.[375][376]
- Researchers reported the development of organic low-power neuromorphic electronics which they built into a robot, enabling it to learn sensorimotorically within the real world, rather than via simulations like in the study above. For the chip, polymers were used and coated with an ion-rich gel to enable the material to carry an electric charge like real neurons.[377][378]
- Researchers reported the development of a system of machine learning and hyperspectral camera that can distinguish between 12 different types of plastics such as PET and PP for automated separation of waste of, as of 2020, highly unstandardized[379][additional citation(s) needed] plastics products and packaging.[380][381]
- A scientific review summarized research and data about telemedicine. Its results indicated that, in general, outcomes of such ICT-use are as good as in-person care with health care use staying similar.[382][383]
- The Log4Shell security vulnerability in a Java logging framework was publicly disclosed two weeks after its discovery. Because of the ubiquity of the affected software, experts have described it as a most serious computer vulnerability.[384] In a high-level meeting, the importance of security maintenance of open-source software – often also carried out largely by few volunteers – to national security was clarified.[385][386]
- Researchers reported the development of a database and analysis tool about perovskite solar cells which systematically integrates over 15,000 publications, in particular device-data about over 42,400 of such photovoltaic devices. Authors described the site – which requires signing up to access the data and uses software that is partly open source but to date not free software[388] – as a participative "Wikipedia for perovskite solar cell research" and suggest that extensively capturing the progress of an entire field including interactive data exploration functionalities could also be applicable to many fields in materials science, engineering and biosciences.[389][387]
- A third[390] main convergent graphical shell (Maui Shell) and UI framework (MauiKit), based on KDE/Kirigami, for the GNU/Linux operating system on smartphones, desktops and other devices, was released.[391][392][393][394]
2020[edit]
- [when?]Scite.ai – a deep learning-based citation index that classifies scientific citations as 'Supporting', 'Mentioning' or 'Contrasting' the respective study (a type of semantic metadata) – was released.[395][396]
- February 7 – AMD released the Ryzen Threadripper 3990X, the first 64 core CPU for consumer market based on the Zen 2 microarchitecture.[397]
- March 26 – After one of the first and largest public volunteer distributed computing projects, SETI@home announced its shutdown by March 31, 2020, and due to heightened interest as a result of to the COVID-19 pandemic, the distributed computing project Folding@home became the world's first system to reach one exaFLOPS.[398][399][400] The system simulates protein folding, is used for medical research on COVID-19 and achieved a speed of approximately 2.43 x86 exaFLOPS by April 13, 2020 – many times faster than the fastest supercomputer, Summit.[401]
- April 20 – Researchers demonstrated a diffusive memristor fabricated from protein nanowires of the bacterium Geobacter sulfurreducens which functions at substantially lower voltages than previously described ones and may allow the construction of artificial neurons which function at voltages of biological action potentials. The nanowires have a range of advantages over silicon nanowires and the memristors may be used to directly process biosensing signals, for neuromorphic computing and/or direct communication with biological neurons.[402][403][404]
- May 22 – Australian computer scientists reported achieving, thus far, the highest internet speed in the world from a single optical chip source over standard optical fiber, amounting to 44.2 Terabits per sec, or "downloading 1000 high definition movies in a split second".[405][406][407]
- May 27 – A study showed that social networks can function poorly as pathways for inconvenient truths, that the interplay between communication and action during disasters may depend on the structure of social networks, that communication networks suppress necessary "evacuations" in test-scenarios because of false reassurances when compared to groups of isolated individuals and that larger networks with a smaller proportion of informed subjects can suffer more damage due to human-caused misinformation.[408][409]
- June 11 – Chatbot-technology and text-producing AI GPT-3 was released.[410][411]
- July 6 – [Novel protocol/standard] – The Versatile Video Coding standard (H.266) was finalised, designed to halve the bitrate of previous formats, reducing data volume and being especially useful for on-demand 8K streaming services.[412][413]
- June 15 – Researchers reported the development of a polymer device that can receive dopamine signals from real cells and learns from it.[327][414]
- July 15 – A cyborg beetle with a camera was demonstrated. It streams video to a smartphone via Bluetooth for a "bug's eye view".[415][416]
- August 28 – Elon Musk revealed a model of the prototype brain–computer interface chip, implanted in pigs, that his company Neuralink has been working on.[417][418]
- September 3 – Scientists reported finding "176 Open Access journals that, through lack of comprehensive and open archives, vanished from the Web between 2000–2019, spanning all major research disciplines and geographic regions of the world" and that in 2019 only about a third of the 14,068 DOAJ-indexed journals ensured the long-term preservation of their content themselves, with many papers not getting archived by Web archiving initiatives such as the Internet Archive.[419][420][421]
- September 18 – Media reported what may be the first publicly confirmed case of a civilian fatality as a nearly direct consequence of a cyberattack, after ransomware disrupted a hospital in Germany.[422][relevant?]
- September 25 – [Novel application of computing / software] – Chemists described, for the first time, possible chemical pathways from nonliving prebiotic chemicals to complex biochemicals that could give rise to living organisms, based on a new computer program named ALLCHEMY.[423][424]
- October 28 – A review suggested only surgical robot platforms "that can effectively communicate their intent and explain their decisions to their human companions will find their way into the operating room of the future", defined levels of autonomy and suggested "positive evidence will soon emerge and build up" that would motivate "transition to clinical trials".[425][426]
Awards and challenges[edit]
To display all pages, subcategories and images click on the "►": |
---|
Award / challenge | Year | Recipient/s / winner/s | Description |
---|---|---|---|
FSF Free Software Awards – Advancement of Free Software award | 2020 | Bradley M. Kuhn | For his work in enforcing the GNU General Public License (GPL) and promoting copyleft through his position at Software Freedom Conservancy.[427][428] |
FSF Free Software Awards – Advancement of Free Software award | 2021 | Paul Eggert | A computer scientist who teaches in the Department of Computer Science at the University of California, Los Angeles, contributor to the GNU operating system for over thirty years and current maintainer of the Time Zone Database.[429][430][431] |
FSF Free Software Awards – Social benefit award | 2020 | CiviCRM | Free program that nonprofit organizations around the world use to manage their mailings and contact databases[427][428] |
FSF Free Software Awards – Social benefit award | 2021 | SecuRepairs | An association of information security experts who support the right to repair[429][430][431] |
FSF Free Software Awards – Award for outstanding new Free Software contributor | 2020 | Alyssa Rosenzweig | Leads the Panfrost project,[432] a project to reverse engineer and implement a free driver for the Mali series of graphics processing units (GPUs) used on a wide variety of single-board computers and mobile phones.[427][428] |
FSF Free Software Awards – Award for outstanding new Free Software contributor | 2021 | Protesilaos Stavrou | A philosopher who since 2019 has become a mainstay of the GNU Emacs community through his blog posts, conference talks, livestreams, and code contributions.[429][430][431] |
Open policy proposals[edit]
Deaths[edit]
This section needs expansion with: Deaths since March 2022 (for automated updating, a version of Template:Transclude selected current events for articles like Deaths in 2022 is needed). You can help by adding to it. (September 2022) |
2023[edit]
- March 24: Gordon Moore, 94, American businessman, engineer, and the co-founder of Intel Corporation[433]
2022[edit]
- January 2: Hagit Shatkay, 56, Israeli-American computer scientist[434]
- January 30: Takao Nishizeki, 74, Japanese mathematician and computer scientist[435]
- February 16: Lorinda Cherry, 77, American computer scientist and programmer[436]
- February 28: Mary Coombs, 93, British computer programmer[437]
- September 2: Peter Eckersley (computer scientist), 43, Australian computer scientist[438]
2021[edit]
- January 2: Brad Cox, American computer scientist, and inventor of the Objective-C programming language (b. 1944)
- January 28: Alice Recoque, French computer scientist (b. 1929)
- February 1: Walter Savitch, American computer scientist and theoretical mathematician (b. 1943)
- February 6: Ioan Dzițac, Romanian computer scientist and mathematician (b. 1953)
- March 6: Lou Ottens, Dutch engineer and inventor of the cassette tape (b. 1926)
- April 1: Isamu Akasaki, Japanese engineer and physicist, and inventor of the blue LED (b. 1929)
- April 16: Charles Geschke, American computer scientist, and co-founder of Adobe Inc. (b. 1939)
- April 23: Dan Kaminsky, American computer security researcher (b. 1979)
- May 23: Makoto Nagao, Japanese natural language processing pioneer (b. 1936)
- June 23: John McAfee, British-American antivirus software pioneer, and founder of McAfee (b. 1945)
2020[edit]
- January 2: Robert M. Graham, American computer scientist (b. 1929)
- January 3: Joseph Karr O'Connor, American computer scientist (b. 1953)
- January 8: Peter T. Kirstein, British computer scientist (b. 1933)
- February 11: Yasumasa Kanada, Japanese computer scientist (b. 1949)
- February 16:
- Larry Tesler, American computer scientist (b. 1945)
- John Iliffe, British computer designer (b. 1931)
- February 18: Bert Sutherland, American computer scientist (b. 1936)
- March 2: Vera Pless, American mathematician (b. 1931)
- March 15: Olvi L. Mangasarian, Iraqi-American computer scientist and mathematician (b. 1934)
- April 7
- Mishik Kazaryan, Russian physicist (b. 1948)
- Adrian V. Stokes, British computer scientist (b. 1945)
- April 11: John Horton Conway, British mathematician (b. 1937)
- April 25: Thomas Huang, American computer scientist (b. 1936)
- May 9: Timo Honkela, Finnish computer scientist (b. 1962)
- June 5: Deborah Washington Brown, American computer scientist (b. 1952)
- July 10: Michael M. Richter, German mathematician and computer scientist (b. 1938)
- July 26: Bill English, American computer engineer and co-developer of the computer mouse (b. 1929)
- August 4: Frances Allen, American computer scientist, first woman to win the Turing Award (b. 1932)
- August 11: Russell Kirsch, American computer scientist and inventor of the first digital image scanner (b. 1929)
- August 25: Rebeca Guber, Argentine mathematician and computer scientist (b.1926)
- October 2: Victor Zalgaller, Russian-Israeli mathematician (b. 1920)
- November 7: Chung Laung Liu, Taiwanese computer scientist (b. 1934)
- November 14: Peter Pagé, German computer scientist (b. 1939)
- November 23: Konrad Fiałkowski, Polish computer engineer (b. 1939)
- December 1
- Norman Abramson, American computer scientist and engineer (b. 1932)
- Eric Engstrom, American software engineer and co-creator of DirectX (b. 1965)
- December 14: Claudio Baiocchi, Italian mathematician (b. 1940)
- December 22: Edmund M. Clarke, American computer scientist (b. 1945)
- December 23: Lars Arge, Danish computer scientist (b. 1967)
Further topics[edit]
Very broad outlines of topic domains and topics with substantial progress during the decade not yet included above with a Further information: link:
- Applications of wearable technology
- Recent applications of automation
- Smart grid#Research
- R&D of novel machine-readable media[needs update]
- Digital literacy
- Remote sensing
- Digital agriculture
- Precision medicine
- Remote control animal
- Electronic health record
- Neurotechnology#Implants
- Neuromorphic engineering
- Research question#ICTs, participation and routine procedures
- Category:Free BIOS implementations
- List of open-source hardware
- Information and communications technology
- List of unsolved problems in computer science
- Outline of finance
- Outline of public relations
- Outline of computing
Software[edit]
- Applications of artificial intelligence
- Climate change mitigation#Research
- Education#Development
- Archivist#On the Internet
- Decision-making software
- Emulator
- Technical standard
- Supply chain sustainability#Software
- Linux for mobile devices
- Usage share of operating systems
COVID-19[edit]
- Impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on education
- Impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on science and technology
- Software for COVID-19 pandemic mitigation
Economic events and economics[edit]
- 2020–present global chip shortage
- Cryptocurrency bubble#2020–2022 cryptocurrency bubble
- Bug bounty program#Notable programs[needs update]
- China–United States trade war#2020 or general technological sovereignty[needs update] policies
- General topics
- Business models for open-source software#FOSS and economy[439]
- Digital transformation#History[needs update]
- Distributive justice[needs update]
- Sustainable distribution[needs update]
- Sustainable design[needs update]
- Algorithms for resource allocation
- Sustainable food system decision-making[additional citation(s) needed]
- 2020s in economic history#Remote work
New releases[edit]
To display all pages, subcategories and images click on the "►": |
---|
See also[edit]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Computing in the 2020s.
- Moore's law#Recent trends
- Smartphone#Other developments in the 2020s
- Smartwatch#2020s
- Timeline of quantum computing and communication#2020s
- Timeline of free and open-source software#2020s[needs update]
- Timeline of social media
- Timeline of file sharing#2010s[needs update]
- Timeline of e-commerce[needs update]
- Timeline of transportation technology#Autonomous vehicles
- Timeline of WhatsApp
- Timeline of programming languages#2020s
- Timeline of machine learning
- Timeline of hypertext technology[needs update]
- Timeline of artificial intelligence
- History of supercomputing
- History of Wikipedia
References[edit]
- ^ Gasparini, Allison (March 14, 2023). "A trick inspired by Hansel and Gretel could help rovers explore other worlds". Science News. Retrieved April 20, 2023.
- ^ Fink, Wolfgang; Fuhrman, Connor; Nuncio Zuniga, Andres; Tarbell, Mark (February 11, 2023). "A Hansel & Gretel Breadcrumb-Style Dynamically Deployed Communication Network Paradigm using Mesh Topology for Planetary Subsurface Exploration". Advances in Space Research. 72 (2): 518–528. Bibcode:2023AdSpR..72..518F. doi:10.1016/j.asr.2023.02.012. ISSN 0273-1177. PMC 10399462. PMID 37547478. S2CID 256818650.
- ^ Anthes, Emily (April 21, 2023). "Polly Wants a Video Chat". The New York Times. Retrieved May 27, 2023.
- ^ Kleinberger, Rebecca; Cunha, Jennifer; Vemuri, Megha M; Hirskyj-Douglas, Ilyena (April 19, 2023). "Birds of a Feather Video-Flock Together: Design and Evaluation of an Agency-Based Parrot-to-Parrot Video-Calling System for Interspecies Ethical Enrichment". Proceedings of the 2023 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems. Association for Computing Machinery. pp. 1–16. doi:10.1145/3544548.3581166. ISBN 9781450394215. S2CID 258216835.
- ^ "Robot 'chef' learns to recreate recipes from watching food videos". University of Cambridge. June 5, 2023. Retrieved June 8, 2023.
- ^ Sochacki, Grzegorz; Abdulali, Arsen; Hosseini, Narges Khadem; Iida, Fumiya (2023). "Recognition of Human Chef's Intentions for Incremental Learning of Cookbook by Robotic Salad Chef". IEEE Access. 11: 57006–57020. Bibcode:2023IEEEA..1157006S. doi:10.1109/ACCESS.2023.3276234. ISSN 2169-3536.
- ^ Kaufmann, Elia; Bauersfeld, Leonard; Loquercio, Antonio; Müller, Matthias; Koltun, Vladlen; Scaramuzza, Davide (August 2023). "Champion-level drone racing using deep reinforcement learning". Nature. 620 (7976): 982–987. Bibcode:2023Natur.620..982K. doi:10.1038/s41586-023-06419-4. ISSN 1476-4687. PMC 10468397. PMID 37648758.
- ^ Verma, Kavita (March 17, 2023). "MIT researchers create a novel low-cost and portable air pollution sensor". interestingengineering.com. Retrieved April 23, 2023.
- ^ Wang, An; Machida, Yuki; deSouza, Priyanka; Mora, Simone; Duhl, Tiffany; Hudda, Neelakshi; Durant, John L.; Duarte, Fábio; Ratti, Carlo (May 15, 2023). "Leveraging machine learning algorithms to advance low-cost air sensor calibration in stationary and mobile settings". Atmospheric Environment. 301: 119692. Bibcode:2023AtmEn.30119692W. doi:10.1016/j.atmosenv.2023.119692. ISSN 1352-2310. S2CID 257295277.
- ^ "Drohnen: Lasergestütztes System spürt Methangas-Lecks auf". heise online (in German). April 17, 2023. Retrieved May 28, 2023.
- ^ Soskind, Michael G.; Li, Nathan P.; Moore, Daniel P.; Chen, Yifeng; Wendt, Lars P.; McSpiritt, James; Zondlo, Mark A.; Wysocki, Gerard (May 1, 2023). "Stationary and drone-assisted methane plume localization with dispersion spectroscopy". Remote Sensing of Environment. 289: 113513. Bibcode:2023RSEnv.28913513S. doi:10.1016/j.rse.2023.113513. ISSN 0034-4257. S2CID 257320852.
- ^ Yirka, Bob. "Android phones sold to customers in China found to be loaded with apps that send user data to third parties". techxplore.com.
- ^ Liu, Haoyu; Leith, Douglas J.; Patras, Paul (February 3, 2023). "Android OS Privacy Under the Loupe – A Tale from the East". arXiv:2302.01890 [cs.CR].
- ^ Hoffmann, Stefan A.; Diggans, James; Densmore, Douglas; Dai, Junbiao; Knight, Tom; Leproust, Emily; Boeke, Jef D.; Wheeler, Nicole; Cai, Yizhi (March 17, 2023). "Safety by design: Biosafety and biosecurity in the age of synthetic genomics". iScience. 26 (3): 106165. Bibcode:2023iSci...26j6165H. doi:10.1016/j.isci.2023.106165. ISSN 2589-0042. PMC 9988571. PMID 36895643.
- ^ a b c Räsänen, Joona (February 2023). "Sexual loneliness: A neglected public health problem?". Bioethics. 37 (2): 101–102. doi:10.1111/bioe.13134. ISSN 0269-9702. PMID 36662712. S2CID 256031783.
- ^ "What it's like to be a man in the top 0.01 per cent on dating apps". The Independent. February 21, 2023. Retrieved March 27, 2023.
- ^ Mann, Denise. "Looking for love on V-day? All that swiping may not help". phys.org. Retrieved March 27, 2023.
- ^ Thomas, Marina F.; Binder, Alice; Stevic, Anja; Matthes, Jörg (March 1, 2023). "99 + matches but a spark ain't one: Adverse psychological effects of excessive swiping on dating apps". Telematics and Informatics. 78: 101949. doi:10.1016/j.tele.2023.101949. ISSN 0736-5853.
- ^ Sears, Richard (March 21, 2023). "Mental Health Awareness Campaigns May Actually Lead to Increases in Mental Distress". Mad In America. Retrieved April 22, 2023.
- ^ Foulkes, Lucy; Andrews, Jack L. (April 1, 2023). "Are mental health awareness efforts contributing to the rise in reported mental health problems? A call to test the prevalence inflation hypothesis". New Ideas in Psychology. 69: 101010. doi:10.1016/j.newideapsych.2023.101010. ISSN 0732-118X. S2CID 256776819.
- ^ Fogel, Sam. "I Got Investigated by the Secret Service. Here's How to Not Be Me". Wired. Retrieved April 19, 2023.
- ^ "VPNalyzer: Systematic Investigation of the VPN Ecosystem" (PDF). Retrieved April 19, 2023.
- Website: "VPNInspector: Systematic Investigation of the VPN Ecosystem". NDSS Symposium. Retrieved April 19, 2023.
- University press release: "Are VPNs really the answer?". Computer Science and Engineering. Retrieved April 19, 2023.
- ^ Fong, Meiling; Arsel, Zeynep. "Protecting privacy online begins with tackling 'digital resignation,' say researchers". techxplore.com.
- ^ Wiggers, Kyle (March 31, 2023). "Twitter reveals some of its source code, including its recommendation algorithm". TechCrunch. Retrieved April 19, 2023.
- ^ Geurkink, Brandi. "Twitter's Open Source Algorithm Is a Red Herring". Wired. Retrieved April 19, 2023.
- ^ Clark, Mitchell. "Twitter takes its algorithm 'open-source,' as Elon Musk promised". The Verge. Retrieved April 19, 2023.
- ^ Willingham, A. J. (February 3, 2023). "Why Twitter users are upset about the platform's latest change | CNN Business". CNN. Retrieved May 15, 2023.
- ^ Wiggers, Kyle (April 18, 2023). "Reddit will begin charging for access to its API". TechCrunch. Retrieved May 15, 2023.
- ^ "Twitter pulls check mark from main New York Times account". The Associated Press via techxplore.com. Retrieved April 19, 2023.
- ^ "Parts of Twitter source code leaked online, court filing shows". Reuters. March 27, 2023. Retrieved April 19, 2023.
- ^ Duffy, Clare (April 12, 2023). "NPR and PBS stop using Twitter after receiving 'government funded media' label | CNN Business". CNN. Retrieved April 19, 2023.
- ^ "NPR quits Twitter after being falsely labeled as 'state-affiliated media'". NPR. Retrieved April 19, 2023.
- ^ Lomas, Natasha (April 26, 2023). "EU warns Twitter over disinformation after Musk policy shifts found to boost Kremlin propaganda". TechCrunch. Retrieved May 28, 2023.
- ^ Bozdag, Engin; van den Hoven, Jeroen (December 1, 2015). "Breaking the filter bubble: democracy and design". Ethics and Information Technology. 17 (4): 249–265. doi:10.1007/s10676-015-9380-y. ISSN 1572-8439. S2CID 254461715.
- ^ Thompson, Joanna. "People, Not Google's Algorithm, Create Their Own Partisan 'Bubbles' Online". Scientific American. Retrieved June 26, 2023.
- ^ Robertson, Ronald E.; Green, Jon; Ruck, Damian J.; Ognyanova, Katherine; Wilson, Christo; Lazer, David (June 2023). "Users choose to engage with more partisan news than they are exposed to on Google Search". Nature. 618 (7964): 342–348. Bibcode:2023Natur.618..342R. doi:10.1038/s41586-023-06078-5. ISSN 1476-4687. PMID 37225979. S2CID 258904693.
- ^ Grant, Nico; Myers, Steven Lee (May 2, 2023). "Google Promised to Defund Climate Lies, but the Ads Keep Coming". The New York Times. Retrieved May 28, 2023.
- ^ "YouTube accused of not tackling Musk Bitcoin scam streams". BBC News. June 9, 2022. Retrieved May 28, 2023.
- ^ Kay, Grace. "Elon Musk disses YouTube for 'nonstop scam ads' after threatening to walk away from Twitter purchase over bots". Business Insider.
- ^ Hsu, Tiffany (February 11, 2023). "Why Are You Seeing So Many Bad Digital Ads Now?". The New York Times. Retrieved June 26, 2023.
- ^ Clark, Mitchell (April 3, 2023). "The Tor Project's new privacy-focused browser doesn't use the Tor network". The Verge. Retrieved May 28, 2023.
- ^ "New Privacy-Focused Browser Aims to Protect Your Data Online". CNET. Retrieved May 28, 2023.
- ^ "Want a more secure browser that's not Tor? Check out Mullvad". ZDNET. Retrieved May 28, 2023.
- ^ Watercutter, Angela. "Reddit Won't Be the Same. Neither Will the Internet". Wired. Retrieved July 27, 2023.
- ^ Porter, Jon (June 5, 2023). "Major Reddit communities will go dark to protest threat to third-party apps". The Verge. Retrieved July 27, 2023.
- ^ "Lemmy and Kbin: The Best Reddit Alternatives?". PCMAG. Retrieved July 27, 2023.
- ^ "News at a glance: Long Covid treatment, global earthquake model, and deep-sea mining". Science. June 15, 2023. Retrieved July 27, 2023.
- ^ "GEM | Press Release Embargoed". GEM Foundation. Retrieved July 27, 2023.
- ^ a b Bubeck, Sébastien; Chandrasekaran, Varun; Eldan, Ronen; Gehrke, Johannes; Horvitz, Eric; Kamar, Ece; Lee, Peter; Lee, Yin Tat; Li, Yuanzhi; Lundberg, Scott; Nori, Harsha; Palangi, Hamid; Ribeiro, Marco Tulio; Zhang, Yi (April 13, 2023). "Sparks of Artificial General Intelligence: Early experiments with GPT-4". arXiv:2303.12712 [cs.CL].
- ^ "Google's AI is best yet at answering medical and health questions". New Scientist. Archived from the original on January 25, 2023. Retrieved February 18, 2023.
- ^ Papadopoulos, Loukia (January 4, 2023). "Google and DeepMind just launched MedPaLM, a large language model". interestingengineering.com. Archived from the original on February 11, 2023. Retrieved February 18, 2023.
- ^ Singhal, Karan; Azizi, Shekoofeh; Tu, Tao; Mahdavi, S. Sara; Wei, Jason; Chung, Hyung Won; Scales, Nathan; Tanwani, Ajay; Cole-Lewis, Heather; Pfohl, Stephen; Payne, Perry; Seneviratne, Martin; Gamble, Paul; Kelly, Chris; Scharli, Nathaneal; Chowdhery, Aakanksha; Mansfield, Philip; Arcas, Blaise Aguera y; Webster, Dale; Corrado, Greg S.; Matias, Yossi; Chou, Katherine; Gottweis, Juraj; Tomasev, Nenad; Liu, Yun; Rajkomar, Alvin; Barral, Joelle; Semturs, Christopher; Karthikesalingam, Alan; Natarajan, Vivek (December 26, 2022). "Large Language Models Encode Clinical Knowledge". arXiv:2212.13138 [cs.CL].
- ^ Langford, Aisha T.; Roberts, Timothy; Gupta, Jaytin; Orellana, Kerli T.; Loeb, Stacy (May 2020). "Impact of the Internet on Patient-Physician Communication". European Urology Focus. 6 (3): 440–444. doi:10.1016/j.euf.2019.09.012. PMID 31582312. S2CID 203660703.
- ^ Tan, Sharon Swee-Lin; Goonawardene, Nadee (January 19, 2017). "Internet Health Information Seeking and the Patient-Physician Relationship: A Systematic Review". Journal of Medical Internet Research. 19 (1): e9. doi:10.2196/jmir.5729. PMC 5290294. PMID 28104579.
- ^ Ramsey, Imogen; Corsini, Nadia; Peters, Micah D.J.; Eckert, Marion (September 2017). "A rapid review of consumer health information needs and preferences". Patient Education and Counseling. 100 (9): 1634–1642. doi:10.1016/j.pec.2017.04.005. PMID 28442155.
- ^ Boyer, Cé Gaudinat, Arnaud; Hanbury, Allan; Appel, Ron D.; Ball, Marion J.; Carpentier, Michel; van Bemmel, Jan H.; Bergmans, Jean-Paul; Hochstrasser, Denis; Lindberg, Donald; Miller, Randolph; Peterschmitt, Jean-Claude; Safran, Charles; Thonnet, Michè Hler, Antoine (2017). "Accessing Reliable Health Information on the Web: A Review of the HON Approach". MEDINFO 2017: Precision Healthcare Through Informatics. 245: 1004–1008. doi:10.3233/978-1-61499-830-3-1004. PMID 29295252.
{{cite journal}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - ^ a b Gonchar, Michael; Engle, Jeremy (October 26, 2020). "Should Media Literacy Be a Required Course in School?". The New York Times. Archived from the original on October 7, 2022. Retrieved February 18, 2023.
- ^ a b Pangrazio, Luci; Godhe, Anna-Lena; Ledesma, Alejo González López (November 2020). "What is digital literacy? A comparative review of publications across three language contexts". E-Learning and Digital Media. 17 (6): 442–459. doi:10.1177/2042753020946291. S2CID 223518782.
- ^ Bugeja, Michael. "Opinion: Our schools need digital literacy as machine learning, artificial intelligence expand". The Des Moines Register. Archived from the original on February 19, 2023. Retrieved February 18, 2023.
- ^ a b Lancet, The (November 12, 2022). "Why is health literacy failing so many?". The Lancet. 400 (10364): 1655. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(22)02301-7. ISSN 0140-6736. PMID 36366878. S2CID 253457427.
- ^ "Google's Muse model could be the next big thing for generative AI". VentureBeat. January 13, 2023. Archived from the original on February 18, 2023. Retrieved February 18, 2023.
- ^ Chang, Huiwen; Zhang, Han; Barber, Jarred; Maschinot, A. J.; Lezama, Jose; Jiang, Lu; Yang, Ming-Hsuan; Murphy, Kevin; Freeman, William T.; Rubinstein, Michael; Li, Yuanzhen; Krishnan, Dilip (January 2, 2023). "Muse: Text-To-Image Generation via Masked Generative Transformers". arXiv:2301.00704 [cs.CV].
- ^ Insinna, Valerie (January 4, 2023). "Inside the special F-16 the Air Force is using to test out AI". Breaking Defense. Archived from the original on February 9, 2023. Retrieved February 18, 2023.
- ^ Gitlin, Jonathan M. (February 14, 2023). "The US Air Force successfully tested this AI-controlled jet fighter". Ars Technica. Archived from the original on February 16, 2023. Retrieved February 18, 2023.
- ^ "Fully autonomous F-16 fighter jet takes part in simulated dogfights". New Scientist. Archived from the original on February 18, 2023. Retrieved February 18, 2023.
- ^ Paleja, Ameya (January 10, 2023). "Microsoft unveils VALL-E, a text-to-speech AI that can be trained in just 3 seconds". interestingengineering.com. Archived from the original on February 18, 2023. Retrieved February 18, 2023.
- ^ Wang, Chengyi; Chen, Sanyuan; Wu, Yu; Zhang, Ziqiang; Zhou, Long; Liu, Shujie; Chen, Zhuo; Liu, Yanqing; Wang, Huaming; Li, Jinyu; He, Lei; Zhao, Sheng; Wei, Furu (January 5, 2023). "Neural Codec Language Models are Zero-Shot Text to Speech Synthesizers". arXiv:2301.02111 [cs.CL].
- ^ Saha, Shritama (January 12, 2023). "DeepMind Unleashes DreamerV3, A Multi-Domain World Model". Analytics India Magazine. Archived from the original on February 18, 2023. Retrieved February 18, 2023.
- ^ Hafner, Danijar; Pasukonis, Jurgis; Ba, Jimmy; Lillicrap, Timothy (January 10, 2023). "Mastering Diverse Domains through World Models". arXiv:2301.04104 [cs.AI].
- ^ Lowe, Derek. "Making Up Proteins". Science. Archived from the original on February 18, 2023. Retrieved February 18, 2023.
- ^ Madani, Ali; Krause, Ben; Greene, Eric R.; Subramanian, Subu; Mohr, Benjamin P.; Holton, James M.; Olmos, Jose Luis; Xiong, Caiming; Sun, Zachary Z.; Socher, Richard; Fraser, James S.; Naik, Nikhil (January 26, 2023). "Large language models generate functional protein sequences across diverse families". Nature Biotechnology. 41 (8): 1099–1106. doi:10.1038/s41587-022-01618-2. ISSN 1546-1696. PMC 10400306. PMID 36702895. S2CID 256304602.
- ^ McFadden, Christopher (January 26, 2023). "A new AI-powered gene-editing technique could be set to replace CRISPR". interestingengineering.com. Archived from the original on February 18, 2023. Retrieved February 18, 2023.
- ^ Ichikawa, David M.; Abdin, Osama; Alerasool, Nader; Kogenaru, Manjunatha; Mueller, April L.; Wen, Han; Giganti, David O.; Goldberg, Gregory W.; Adams, Samantha; Spencer, Jeffrey M.; Razavi, Rozita; Nim, Satra; Zheng, Hong; Gionco, Courtney; Clark, Finnegan T.; Strokach, Alexey; Hughes, Timothy R.; Lionnet, Timothee; Taipale, Mikko; Kim, Philip M.; Noyes, Marcus B. (January 26, 2023). "A universal deep-learning model for zinc finger design enables transcription factor reprogramming". Nature Biotechnology. 41 (8): 1117–1129. doi:10.1038/s41587-022-01624-4. ISSN 1546-1696. PMC 10421740. PMID 36702896.
- ^ Saha, Shritama (February 8, 2023). "Give a Prompt, Make a Video". Analytics India Magazine. Archived from the original on February 18, 2023. Retrieved February 18, 2023.
- ^ Singer, Uriel; Sheynin, Shelly; Polyak, Adam; Ashual, Oron; Makarov, Iurii; Kokkinos, Filippos; Goyal, Naman; Vedaldi, Andrea; Parikh, Devi; Johnson, Justin; Taigman, Yaniv (January 26, 2023). "Text-To-4D Dynamic Scene Generation". arXiv:2301.11280 [cs.CV].
- ^ Young, Chris (January 31, 2023). "AI algorithm pinpoints 8 radio signals that may have come from aliens". interestingengineering.com. Archived from the original on February 18, 2023. Retrieved February 18, 2023.
- ^ Ma, Peter Xiangyuan; Ng, Cherry; Rizk, Leandro; Croft, Steve; Siemion, Andrew P. V.; Brzycki, Bryan; Czech, Daniel; Drew, Jamie; Gajjar, Vishal; Hoang, John; Isaacson, Howard; Lebofsky, Matt; MacMahon, David H. E.; de Pater, Imke; Price, Danny C.; Sheikh, Sofia Z.; Worden, S. Pete (January 30, 2023). "A deep-learning search for technosignatures from 820 nearby stars". Nature Astronomy. 7: 492. arXiv:2301.12670. Bibcode:2023NatAs...7..492M. doi:10.1038/s41550-022-01872-z. ISSN 2397-3366. S2CID 256389424.
- ^ "ChatGPT und andere Sprachmodelle – zwischen Hype und Kontroverse". www.sciencemediacenter.de. Archived from the original on February 18, 2023. Retrieved February 18, 2023.
- ^ "ChatGPT is 'not particularly innovative,' and 'nothing revolutionary', says Meta's chief AI scientist". ZDNET. Archived from the original on February 17, 2023. Retrieved February 18, 2023.
- ^ Shen, Yiqiu; Heacock, Laura; Elias, Jonathan; Hentel, Keith D.; Reig, Beatriu; Shih, George; Moy, Linda (January 26, 2023). "ChatGPT and Other Large Language Models Are Double-edged Swords". Radiology. 307 (2): 230163. doi:10.1148/radiol.230163. ISSN 0033-8419. PMID 36700838. S2CID 256272939.
- ^ "ChatGPT: Bullshit spewer or the end of traditional assessments in higher education?". Journal of Applied Learning & Teaching. 6 (1). January 25, 2023. doi:10.37074/jalt.2023.6.1.9. S2CID 256288636.
- ^ Kelly, Samantha Murphy (December 5, 2022). "This AI chatbot is dominating social media with its frighteningly good essays | CNN Business". CNN. Archived from the original on February 17, 2023. Retrieved February 18, 2023.
- ^ "What is ChatGPT and why does it matter? Here's everything you need to know". ZDNET. Archived from the original on February 15, 2023. Retrieved February 18, 2023.
- ^ Villasenor, John. "How ChatGPT Can Improve Education, Not Threaten it". Scientific American. Archived from the original on February 17, 2023. Retrieved February 18, 2023.
- ^ "Analysis | Bing Trouble: Google, OpenAI Are Opening Up Pandora's Bots". Washington Post. Retrieved February 18, 2023.
- ^ Hsu, Tiffany; Thompson, Stuart A. (February 8, 2023). "Disinformation Researchers Raise Alarms About A.I. Chatbots". The New York Times. Archived from the original on February 17, 2023. Retrieved February 18, 2023.
- ^ Ruzich, Dan (February 14, 2023). "CU Denver Panel Discusses the Role of ChatGPT in Higher Education -". CU Denver News. Archived from the original on February 18, 2023. Retrieved February 18, 2023.
- ^ Clark, Peter Allen (February 17, 2023). "Cybersecurity experts see uses and abuses in new wave of AI tech". Axios. Archived from the original on February 17, 2023. Retrieved February 18, 2023.
- ^ Knight, Will. "Should Algorithms Control Nuclear Launch Codes? The US Says No". Wired. Retrieved March 27, 2023.
- ^ "US issues declaration on responsible use of AI in the military". Reuters. February 16, 2023. Retrieved March 27, 2023.
- ^ "Political Declaration on Responsible Military Use of Artificial Intelligence and Autonomy". U.S. Department of State – Bureau of Arms Control, Verification and Compliance. February 16, 2023. Retrieved March 27, 2023.
- ^ Sterling, Toby (February 16, 2023). "U.S., China, other nations urge 'responsible' use of military AI". Reuters. Retrieved April 1, 2023.
- ^ "'It's perfect': World's first generative AI-designed COVID drug to start clinical trials". The Star. February 23, 2023. Retrieved February 24, 2023.
- ^ Wiggers, Kyle (March 14, 2023). "OpenAI releases GPT-4, a multimodal AI that it claims is state-of-the-art". TechCrunch. Retrieved April 23, 2023.
- ^ "GPT-4". OpenAI. March 14, 2023. Retrieved March 14, 2023.
- ^ Ahmed, Nur; Wahed, Muntasir; Thompson, Neil C. (2023). "The growing influence of industry in AI research" (PDF). Science. 379 (6635): 884–886. Bibcode:2023Sci...379..884A. doi:10.1126/science.ade2420. PMID 36862769. S2CID 257283258.
- ^ "Google's PaLM-E is a generalist robot brain that takes commands". Ars Technica. March 7, 2023. Retrieved March 9, 2023.
- ^ "PaLM-E: An Embodied Multimodal Language Model". Github. March 7, 2023. Retrieved March 9, 2023. arXiv:2303.03378
- ^ Dastin, Jeffrey (March 21, 2023). "Google begins opening access to its ChatGPT competitor Bard". Reuters. Retrieved April 23, 2023.
- ^ "Google Bard can now help write software code". Reuters. April 21, 2023. Retrieved April 23, 2023.
- ^ "DuckDuckGo launches DuckAssist: a new feature that generates natural language answers to search queries using Wikipedia". March 8, 2023. Retrieved April 23, 2023.
- ^ Lomas, Natasha (March 8, 2023). "DuckDuckGo dabbles with AI search". TechCrunch. Retrieved April 23, 2023.
- ^ Roth, Emma (March 8, 2023). "DuckDuckGo's building AI-generated answers into its search engine". The Verge. Retrieved April 23, 2023.
- ^ Weller, Orion; Marone, Marc; Weir, Nathaniel; Lawrie, Dawn; Khashabi, Daniel; Benjamin Van Durme (May 22, 2023). ""According to ..." Prompting Language Models Improves Quoting from Pre-Training Data". arXiv:2305.13252 [cs.CL].
- ^ Pinchuk, Maryana (July 13, 2023). "Exploring paths for the future of free knowledge: New Wikipedia ChatGPT plugin, leveraging rich media social apps, and other experiments". Diff. Retrieved August 10, 2023.
- ^ Bello, Camille (April 1, 2023). "These AI tools could help boost your academic research". euronews. Retrieved April 23, 2023.
- ^ "AI literacy might be ChatGPT's biggest lesson for schools". MIT Technology Review. Retrieved April 23, 2023.
- ^ Hillier, Mathew (February 20, 2023). "Why does ChatGPT generate fake references?". TECHE. Retrieved April 23, 2023.
- ^ Bello, Camille (May 8, 2023). "These AI tools could help boost your academic research". euronews. Retrieved May 15, 2023.
- ^ Gao, Kyle; Gao, Yina; He, Hongjie; Lu, Dening; Xu, Linlin; Li, Jonathan (December 18, 2022). "NeRF: Neural Radiance Field in 3D Vision, A Comprehensive Review". arXiv:2210.00379 [cs.CV].
- ^ "UC Berkeley's Instruct-NeRF2NeRF Edits 3D Scenes With Text Instructions | Synced". syncedreview.com. April 11, 2023. Retrieved April 23, 2023.
- ^ Haque, Ayaan; Tancik, Matthew; Efros, Alexei A.; Holynski, Aleksander; Kanazawa, Angjoo (March 22, 2023). "Instruct-NeRF2NeRF: Editing 3D Scenes with Instructions". arXiv:2303.12789 [cs.CV].
- ^ "Musk, scientists call for halt to AI race sparked by ChatGPT". AP NEWS. March 29, 2023. Retrieved April 23, 2023.
- ^ "Pause Giant AI Experiments: An Open Letter". Future of Life Institute. Retrieved April 23, 2023.
- ^ Knight, Will. "Some Glimpse AGI in ChatGPT. Others Call It a Mirage". Wired. Retrieved April 23, 2023.
- ^ VK, Anirudh (April 13, 2023). "LLMs Can Now Self-Debug. Should Developers Be Worried?". Analytics India Magazine. Retrieved April 23, 2023.
- ^ "AI has better 'bedside manner' than some doctors, study finds". The Guardian. April 28, 2023. Retrieved April 29, 2023.
- ^ Ayers, John W.; Poliak, Adam; Dredze, Mark; Leas, Eric C.; Zhu, Zechariah; Kelley, Jessica B.; Faix, Dennis J.; Goodman, Aaron M.; Longhurst, Christopher A.; Hogarth, Michael; Smith, Davey M. (April 28, 2023). "Comparing Physician and Artificial Intelligence Chatbot Responses to Patient Questions Posted to a Public Social Media Forum". JAMA Internal Medicine. 183 (6): 589–596. doi:10.1001/jamainternmed.2023.1838. ISSN 2168-6106. PMC 10148230. PMID 37115527.
- ^ Edwards, Benj (March 13, 2023). "You can now run a GPT-3-level AI model on your laptop, phone, and Raspberry Pi". Ars Technica.
- ^ "RedPajama replicates LLaMA dataset to build open source, state-of-the-art LLMs". VentureBeat. April 18, 2023. Retrieved May 28, 2023.
- ^ Metz, Cade; Isaac, Mike (May 18, 2023). "In Battle Over A.I., Meta Decides to Give Away Its Crown Jewels". The New York Times. Retrieved May 28, 2023.
- ^ "What is Auto-GPT? Everything to know about the next powerful AI tool". ZDNET. Retrieved May 28, 2023.
- ^ Liu, Nelson F.; Zhang, Tianyi; Liang, Percy (2023). "Evaluating Verifiability in Generative Search Engines". arXiv:2304.09848 [cs.CL].
- ^ Huang, Rongjie; Li, Mingze; Yang, Dongchao; Shi, Jiatong; Chang, Xuankai; Ye, Zhenhui; Wu, Yuning; Hong, Zhiqing; Huang, Jiawei; Liu, Jinglin; Ren, Yi; Zhao, Zhou; Watanabe, Shinji (2023). "AudioGPT: Understanding and Generating Speech, Music, Sound, and Talking Head". arXiv:2304.12995 [cs.CL].
- ^ Spirling, Arthur (April 18, 2023). "Why open-source generative AI models are an ethical way forward for science". Nature. 616 (7957): 413. Bibcode:2023Natur.616..413S. doi:10.1038/d41586-023-01295-4. PMID 37072520. S2CID 258183146. Retrieved May 28, 2023.
- ^ Roth, Emma (April 19, 2023). "Stability AI announces new open-source large language model". The Verge. Retrieved May 28, 2023.
- ^ a b Cornelio, Cristina; Dash, Sanjeeb; Austel, Vernon; Josephson, Tyler R.; Goncalves, Joao; Clarkson, Kenneth L.; Megiddo, Nimrod; El Khadir, Bachir; Horesh, Lior (April 12, 2023). "Combining data and theory for derivable scientific discovery with AI-Descartes". Nature Communications. 14 (1): 1777. Bibcode:2023NatCo..14.1777C. doi:10.1038/s41467-023-37236-y. ISSN 2041-1723. PMC 10097814. PMID 37045814.
- ^ Sorokina, Olsy. "'AI scientist' brings us a step closer to the age of machine-generated scientific discovery". CBC. Retrieved May 28, 2023.
- ^ Tang, Jerry; LeBel, Amanda; Jain, Shailee; Huth, Alexander G. (May 2023). "Semantic reconstruction of continuous language from non-invasive brain recordings". Nature Neuroscience. 26 (5): 858–866. bioRxiv 10.1101/2022.09.29.509744. doi:10.1038/s41593-023-01304-9. ISSN 1546-1726. PMID 37127759. S2CID 252684880.
- ^ Zhang, He; Zhang, Liang; Lin, Ang; Xu, Congcong; Li, Ziyu; Liu, Kaibo; Liu, Boxiang; Ma, Xiaopin; Zhao, Fanfan; Jiang, Huiling; Chen, Chunxiu; Shen, Haifa; Li, Hangwen; Mathews, David H.; Zhang, Yujian; Huang, Liang (May 2, 2023). "Algorithm for Optimized mRNA Design Improves Stability and Immunogenicity" (PDF). Nature. 621 (7978): 396–403. Bibcode:2023Natur.621..396Z. doi:10.1038/s41586-023-06127-z. ISSN 1476-4687. PMC 10499610. PMID 37130545. S2CID 247594015.
- ^ a b Schirner, Michael; Deco, Gustavo; Ritter, Petra (May 23, 2023). "Learning how network structure shapes decision-making for bio-inspired computing". Nature Communications. 14 (1): 2963. Bibcode:2023NatCo..14.2963S. doi:10.1038/s41467-023-38626-y. ISSN 2041-1723. PMC 10206104. PMID 37221168.
- University press release: Seltmann, Stefanie. "Intelligent brains take longer to solve difficult problems, shows simulation study". Berlin Institute of Health in der Charité via medicalxpress.com. Retrieved June 24, 2023.
- ^ "Schlau heißt nicht schnell: Intelligente Gehirne "ticken" oft langsamer | MDR.DE". MDR (in German). Retrieved June 24, 2023.
- ^ Liu, Gary; Catacutan, Denise B.; Rathod, Khushi; Swanson, Kyle; Jin, Wengong; Mohammed, Jody C.; Chiappino-Pepe, Anush; Syed, Saad A.; Fragis, Meghan; Rachwalski, Kenneth; Magolan, Jakob; Surette, Michael G.; Coombes, Brian K.; Jaakkola, Tommi; Barzilay, Regina; Collins, James J.; Stokes, Jonathan M. (May 25, 2023). "Deep learning-guided discovery of an antibiotic targeting Acinetobacter baumannii". Nature Chemical Biology. 19 (11): 1342–1350. doi:10.1038/s41589-023-01349-8. ISSN 1552-4469. PMID 37231267. S2CID 258909341.
- University press release: "Scientists use AI to find promising new antibiotic to fight evasive hospital superbug". McMaster University. May 25, 2023. Retrieved May 25, 2023.
- ^ "AI algorithms find drugs that could combat ageing". University of Edinburgh. June 14, 2023. Retrieved June 16, 2023.
- ^ Smer-Barreto, Vanessa; Quintanilla, Andrea; Elliott, Richard J. R.; Dawson, John C.; Sun, Jiugeng; Campa, Víctor M.; Lorente-Macías, Álvaro; Unciti-Broceta, Asier; Carragher, Neil O.; Acosta, Juan Carlos; Oyarzún, Diego A. (June 10, 2023). "Discovery of senolytics using machine learning". Nature Communications. 14 (1): 3445. Bibcode:2023NatCo..14.3445S. doi:10.1038/s41467-023-39120-1. ISSN 2041-1723. PMC 10257182. PMID 37301862.
- ^ "How this moment for AI will change society forever (and how it won't)". New Scientist. Retrieved July 27, 2023.
- ^ "Stop talking about tomorrow's AI doomsday when AI poses risks today". Nature. 618 (7967): 885–886. June 27, 2023. Bibcode:2023Natur.618..885.. doi:10.1038/d41586-023-02094-7. PMID 37369844. S2CID 259254557. Retrieved July 27, 2023.
- ^ Arnold, Carrie (June 1, 2023). "Inside the nascent industry of AI-designed drugs". Nature Medicine. 29 (6): 1292–1295. doi:10.1038/s41591-023-02361-0. PMID 37264208. S2CID 259025019. Retrieved August 8, 2023.
- ^ Hu, Shengran; Clune, Jeff (2023). "Thought Cloning: Learning to Think while Acting by Imitating Human Thinking". arXiv:2306.00323 [cs.AI].
- ^ Sourati, Jamshid; Evans, James A. (July 13, 2023). "Accelerating science with human-aware artificial intelligence". Nature Human Behaviour. 7 (10): 1682–1696. arXiv:2306.01495. doi:10.1038/s41562-023-01648-z. ISSN 2397-3374. PMID 37443269. S2CID 259064119.
- ^ Liesenfeld, Andreas; Lopez, Alianda; Dingemanse, Mark (July 19, 2023). "Opening up ChatGPT: Tracking openness, transparency, and accountability in instruction-tuned text generators". Proceedings of the 5th International Conference on Conversational User Interfaces. ACM. pp. 1–6. arXiv:2307.05532. doi:10.1145/3571884.3604316. ISBN 9798400700149. S2CID 259837343.
- ^ Lång, Kristina; Josefsson, Viktoria; Larsson, Anna-Maria; Larsson, Stefan; Högberg, Charlotte; Sartor, Hanna; Hofvind, Solveig; Andersson, Ingvar; Rosso, Aldana (August 2023). "Artificial intelligence-supported screen reading versus standard double reading in the Mammography Screening with Artificial Intelligence trial (MASAI): a clinical safety analysis of a randomised, controlled, non-inferiority, single-blinded, screening accuracy study". The Lancet Oncology. 24 (8): 936–944. doi:10.1016/S1470-2045(23)00298-X. PMID 37541274. S2CID 260414569.
- ^ Wang, Hanchen; Fu, Tianfan; Du, Yuanqi; Gao, Wenhao; Huang, Kexin; Liu, Ziming; Chandak, Payal; Liu, Shengchao; Van Katwyk, Peter; Deac, Andreea; Anandkumar, Anima; Bergen, Karianne; Gomes, Carla P.; Ho, Shirley; Kohli, Pushmeet; Lasenby, Joan; Leskovec, Jure; Liu, Tie-Yan; Manrai, Arjun; Marks, Debora; Ramsundar, Bharath; Song, Le; Sun, Jimeng; Tang, Jian; Veličković, Petar; Welling, Max; Zhang, Linfeng; Coley, Connor W.; Bengio, Yoshua; Zitnik, Marinka (August 2023). "Scientific discovery in the age of artificial intelligence" (PDF). Nature. 620 (7972): 47–60. Bibcode:2023Natur.620...47W. doi:10.1038/s41586-023-06221-2. ISSN 1476-4687. PMID 37532811. S2CID 260384616.
- ^ Saad, Omar M.; Chen, Yunfeng; Savvaidis, Alexandros; Fomel, Sergey; Jiang, Xiuxuan; Huang, Dino; Oboué, Yapo Abolé Serge Innocent; Yong, Shanshan; Wang, Xin’an; Zhang, Xing; Chen, Yangkang (September 5, 2023). "Earthquake Forecasting Using Big Data and Artificial Intelligence: A 30-Week Real-Time Case Study in China". Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America. doi:10.1785/0120230031. S2CID 261570732.
- University press release: "AI-driven earthquake forecasting shows promise in trials". University of Texas at Austin via phys.org. Retrieved November 12, 2023.
- ^ Walsh, Brendan; Hamilton, Mark; Newby, Greg; Wang, Xi; Ruan, Serena; Zhao, Sheng; He, Lei; Zhang, Shaofei; Dettinger, Eric; Freeman, William T.; Weimer, Markus (2023). "Large-Scale Automatic Audiobook Creation". arXiv:2309.03926 [cs.SD].
- ^ Fadelli, Ingrid. "An interactive platform that explains machine learning models to its users". techxplore.com. Retrieved November 12, 2023.
- ^ Slack, Dylan; Krishna, Satyapriya; Lakkaraju, Himabindu; Singh, Sameer (August 2023). "Explaining machine learning models with interactive natural language conversations using TalkToModel". Nature Machine Intelligence. 5 (8): 873–883. doi:10.1038/s42256-023-00692-8. ISSN 2522-5839.
- ^ Dama, Adam C.; Kim, Kevin S.; Leyva, Danielle M.; Lunkes, Annamarie P.; Schmid, Noah S.; Jijakli, Kenan; Jensen, Paul A. (June 2023). "BacterAI maps microbial metabolism without prior knowledge". Nature Microbiology. 8 (6): 1018–1025. doi:10.1038/s41564-023-01376-0. ISSN 2058-5276. PMID 37142775. S2CID 258508291.
- University press release: "AI could run a million microbial experiments per year". University of Michigan News. May 4, 2023. Retrieved June 25, 2023.
- ^ Xuan, Yinan; Barry, Colin; De Souza, Jessica; Wen, Jessica H.; Antipa, Nick; Moore, Alison A.; Wang, Edward J. (May 29, 2023). "Ultra-low-cost mechanical smartphone attachment for no-calibration blood pressure measurement". Scientific Reports. 13 (1): 8105. Bibcode:2023NatSR..13.8105X. doi:10.1038/s41598-023-34431-1. ISSN 2045-2322. PMC 10227087. PMID 37248245.
- ^ "ctheodoris/Geneformer · Hugging Face". huggingface.co. June 25, 2023. Retrieved June 26, 2023.
- ^ Theodoris, Christina V.; Xiao, Ling; Chopra, Anant; Chaffin, Mark D.; Al Sayed, Zeina R.; Hill, Matthew C.; Mantineo, Helene; Brydon, Elizabeth M.; Zeng, Zexian; Liu, X. Shirley; Ellinor, Patrick T. (June 2023). "Transfer learning enables predictions in network biology". Nature. 618 (7965): 616–624. Bibcode:2023Natur.618..616T. doi:10.1038/s41586-023-06139-9. ISSN 1476-4687. PMID 37258680. S2CID 259002047.
- Lay summary: Williams, Sarah C. P. "Artificial intelligence system predicts consequences of gene modifications". Gladstone Institutes via medicalxpress.com. Retrieved June 25, 2023.
- ^ Watson, Joseph L.; Juergens, David; Bennett, Nathaniel R.; Trippe, Brian L.; Yim, Jason; Eisenach, Helen E.; Ahern, Woody; Borst, Andrew J.; Ragotte, Robert J.; Milles, Lukas F.; Wicky, Basile I. M.; Hanikel, Nikita; Pellock, Samuel J.; Courbet, Alexis; Sheffler, William; Wang, Jue; Venkatesh, Preetham; Sappington, Isaac; Torres, Susana Vázquez; Lauko, Anna; De Bortoli, Valentin; Mathieu, Emile; Ovchinnikov, Sergey; Barzilay, Regina; Jaakkola, Tommi S.; DiMaio, Frank; Baek, Minkyung; Baker, David (August 2023). "De novo design of protein structure and function with RFdiffusion". Nature. 620 (7976): 1089–1100. Bibcode:2023Natur.620.1089W. doi:10.1038/s41586-023-06415-8. ISSN 1476-4687. PMC 10468394. PMID 37433327.
- ^ Tu, Tao; et al. (2023). "Towards Generalist Biomedical AI". arXiv:2307.14334 [cs.CL].
- ^ Lanese, Nicoletta (January 12, 2023). "New 'thought-controlled' device reads brain activity through the jugular". livescience.com. Archived from the original on February 16, 2023. Retrieved February 16, 2023.
- ^ Mitchell, Peter; Lee, Sarah C. M.; Yoo, Peter E.; Morokoff, Andrew; Sharma, Rahul P.; Williams, Daryl L.; MacIsaac, Christopher; Howard, Mark E.; Irving, Lou; Vrljic, Ivan; Williams, Cameron; Bush, Steven; Balabanski, Anna H.; Drummond, Katharine J.; Desmond, Patricia; Weber, Douglas; Denison, Timothy; Mathers, Susan; O’Brien, Terence J.; Mocco, J.; Grayden, David B.; Liebeskind, David S.; Opie, Nicholas L.; Oxley, Thomas J.; Campbell, Bruce C. V. (January 9, 2023). "Assessment of Safety of a Fully Implanted Endovascular Brain-Computer Interface for Severe Paralysis in 4 Patients: The Stentrode With Thought-Controlled Digital Switch (SWITCH) Study". JAMA Neurology. 80 (3): 270–278. doi:10.1001/jamaneurol.2022.4847. ISSN 2168-6149. PMC 9857731. PMID 36622685. S2CID 255545643.
- ^ "Israeli scientists develop sniffing robot with locust antennae". Reuters. February 7, 2023. Retrieved March 28, 2023.
- ^ Neta, Shvil; Ariel, Golan; Yossi, Yovel; Amir, Ayali; Ben, Maoz M. (February 1, 2023). "The Locust antenna as an odor discriminator". Biosensors and Bioelectronics. 221: 114919. doi:10.1016/j.bios.2022.114919. ISSN 0956-5663. PMID 36446198. S2CID 253790885.
- ^ Strickland, Ashley. "Move over, artificial intelligence. Scientists announce a new 'organoid intelligence' field". CNN. Retrieved March 25, 2023.
- ^ Smirnova, Lena; Caffo, Brian S.; Gracias, David H.; Huang, Qi; Morales Pantoja, Itzy E.; Tang, Bohao; Zack, Donald J.; Berlinicke, Cynthia A.; Boyd, J. Lomax; Harris, Timothy D.; Johnson, Erik C.; Kagan, Brett J.; Kahn, Jeffrey; Muotri, Alysson R.; Paulhamus, Barton L.; Schwamborn, Jens C.; Plotkin, Jesse; Szalay, Alexander S.; Vogelstein, Joshua T.; Worley, Paul F.; Hartung, Thomas (February 28, 2023). "Organoid intelligence (OI): the new frontier in biocomputing and intelligence-in-a-dish". Frontiers in Science. 1: 1017235. doi:10.3389/fsci.2023.1017235. ISSN 2813-6330.
- ^ "Human brain cells used as living AIs to solve mathematical equations". New Scientist. Retrieved April 18, 2023.
- ^ Cai, Hongwei; Ao, Zheng; Tian, Chunhui; Wu, Zhuhao; Liu, Hongcheng; Tchieu, Jason; Gu, Mingxia; Mackie, Ken; Guo, Feng (March 1, 2023). "Brain Organoid Computing for Artificial Intelligence". BioRxiv: The Preprint Server for Biology: 2023.02.28.530502. doi:10.1101/2023.02.28.530502. PMC 10002682. PMID 36909615. Retrieved April 18, 2023.
- ^ "Auf dem Weg in die Matrix: Mikroboboter loggt sich in neuronale Netzwerke ein | MDR.DE". MDR (in German). Retrieved April 19, 2023.
- ^ Kim, Eunhee; Jeon, Sungwoong; Yang, Yoon‐Sil; Jin, Chaewon; Kim, Jin‐young; Oh, Yong‐Seok; Rah, Jong‐Cheol; Choi, Hongsoo (March 2023). "A Neurospheroid‐Based Microrobot for Targeted Neural Connections in a Hippocampal Slice". Advanced Materials. 35 (13): 2208747. Bibcode:2023AdM....3508747K. doi:10.1002/adma.202208747. ISSN 0935-9648. PMID 36640750. S2CID 257774877.
- University press release: "Microrobot capable of forming neural networks and sectioning hippocampal tissues in vitro". Daegu Gyeongbuk Institute of Science and Technology via medicalxpress.com. Retrieved April 19, 2023.
- ^ Dixit, Mrigakshi (March 29, 2023). "New fuel cell implant can help manage type-1 diabetes". interestingengineering.com. Retrieved April 20, 2023.
- ^ Maity, Debasis; Guha Ray, Preetam; Buchmann, Peter; Mansouri, Maysam; Fussenegger, Martin (March 28, 2023). "Blood‐Glucose‐Powered Metabolic Fuel Cell for Self‐Sufficient Bioelectronics". Advanced Materials. 35 (21): 2300890. Bibcode:2023AdM....3500890M. doi:10.1002/adma.202300890. ISSN 0935-9648. PMID 36893359.
- University press release: Rüegg, Peter. "Implantable fuel cell that generates electricity from excess glucose in the blood". ETH Zürich via medicalxpress.com. Retrieved April 20, 2023.
- ^ a b Jiang, Chengpeng; Liu, Jiaqi; Ni, Yao; Qu, Shangda; Liu, Lu; Li, Yue; Yang, Lu; Xu, Wentao (March 11, 2023). "Mammalian-brain-inspired neuromorphic motion-cognition nerve achieves cross-modal perceptual enhancement". Nature Communications. 14 (1): 1344. Bibcode:2023NatCo..14.1344J. doi:10.1038/s41467-023-36935-w. ISSN 2041-1723. PMC 10008641. PMID 36906637.
- University press release: "Team realizes brain's sensory functions using artificial synapse devices". Nankai University via techxplore.com. Retrieved May 28, 2023.
- ^ Sharma, Sejal (April 24, 2023). "Nanowire networks can learn and memorize like the human brain, study says". interestingengineering.com. Retrieved May 28, 2023.
- ^ Loeffler, Alon; Diaz-Alvarez, Adrian; Zhu, Ruomin; Ganesh, Natesh; Shine, James M.; Nakayama, Tomonobu; Kuncic, Zdenka (April 21, 2023). "Neuromorphic learning, working memory, and metaplasticity in nanowire networks". Science Advances. 9 (16): eadg3289. Bibcode:2023SciA....9G3289L. doi:10.1126/sciadv.adg3289. ISSN 2375-2548. PMC 10121165. PMID 37083527.
- ^ Ferreira, Becky (July 11, 2023). "Scientists Create 'Biological Camera' That Stores Images in DNA". Vice. Retrieved August 31, 2023.
- ^ Lim, Cheng Kai; Yeoh, Jing Wui; Kunartama, Aurelius Andrew; Yew, Wen Shan; Poh, Chueh Loo (July 3, 2023). "A biological camera that captures and stores images directly into DNA". Nature Communications. 14 (1): 3921. Bibcode:2023NatCo..14.3921L. doi:10.1038/s41467-023-38876-w. ISSN 2041-1723. PMC 10318082. PMID 37400476.
- ^ "Robot performs first laparoscopic surgery without human help". Johns Hopkins University. January 26, 2022. Archived from the original on January 26, 2022. Retrieved January 27, 2022.
- ^ Saeidi, H.; Opfermann, J. D.; Kam, M.; Wei, S.; Leonard, S.; Hsieh, M. H.; Kang, J. U.; Krieger, A. (January 26, 2022). "Autonomous robotic laparoscopic surgery for intestinal anastomosis". Science Robotics. 7 (62): eabj2908. doi:10.1126/scirobotics.abj2908. PMC 8992572. PMID 35080901. S2CID 246296673.
- ^ a b Roper, Katherine; Abdel-Rehim, A.; Hubbard, Sonya; Carpenter, Martin; Rzhetsky, Andrey; Soldatova, Larisa; King, Ross D. (2022). "Testing the reproducibility and robustness of the cancer biology literature by robot". Journal of the Royal Society Interface. 19 (189): 20210821. doi:10.1098/rsif.2021.0821. PMC 8984295. PMID 35382578.
- ^ "'Robot scientist' Eve finds that less than one-third of scientific results are reproducible". University of Cambridge. Retrieved May 15, 2022.
- ^ Yirka, Bob. "Open-source and open hardware autonomous quadrotor flies fast and avoids obstacles". techxplore.com. Retrieved July 20, 2022.
- ^ Foehn, Philipp; Kaufmann, Elia; Romero, Angel; Penicka, Robert; Sun, Sihao; Bauersfeld, Leonard; Laengle, Thomas; Cioffi, Giovanni; Song, Yunlong; Loquercio, Antonio; Scaramuzza, Davide (June 22, 2022). "Agilicious: Open-source and open-hardware agile quadrotor for vision-based flight". Science Robotics. 7 (67): eabl6259. arXiv:2307.06100. doi:10.1126/scirobotics.abl6259. PMID 35731886. S2CID 249955269.
- ^ Verrengia, Giordana. "Open-source software gives a leg up to robot research". Carnegie Mellon University Mechanical Engineering via techxplore.com. Retrieved September 18, 2022.
- ^ "Video Friday: Grip Anything". IEEE Spectrum. July 29, 2022. Retrieved September 18, 2022.
- ^ Norby, Joseph; Yang, Yanhao; Tajbakhsh, Ardalan; Ren, Jiming; Yim, Justin K.; Stutt, Alexandra; Yu, Qishun; Flowers, Nikolai; Johnson, Aaron M. (May 2022). "Quad-SDK: Full Stack Software Framework for Agile Quadrupedal Locomotion" (PDF). Retrieved September 18, 2022.
- ^ Osborne, Margaret. "A Ukrainian Teenager Invents a Drone That Can Detect Land Mines". Smithsonian Magazine. Retrieved October 20, 2022.
- ^ Kramer, Andrew E.; Guttenfelder, David (August 10, 2022). "From the Workshop to the War: Creative Use of Drones Lifts Ukraine". The New York Times. Retrieved October 20, 2022.
- ^ a b Fogel, Benjamin (August 22, 2022). "Will the Drone War Come Home? Ukraine and the Weaponization of Commercial Drones". Modern War Institute. Retrieved October 20, 2022.
- ^ "Drone Hackathon was launched to develop new solutions in the field of military technology. - Div Bracket". Divbracket.com. Retrieved October 20, 2022.
- ^ "New technological solutions for the army: the Ministry of Digital Transformation has launched a Drone Hackathon in military-tech sector". Retrieved October 20, 2022.
- ^ a b Koizumi, Yu (September 26, 2022). "Does the conflict in Ukraine represent a 'new war'?". The Japan Times.
- ^ Axe, David. "Ukraine's $10,000 Drones Are Dropping Tiny Bombs On Russian Troops". Forbes. Retrieved October 20, 2022.
- ^ South, Todd (September 21, 2022). "Use us for combat zone tests, Ukraine minister tells US war industry". Military Times. Retrieved October 20, 2022.
- ^ "How the Ukraine drone war is changing the game on the battlefield". New Atlas. September 23, 2022. Retrieved October 20, 2022.
- ^ "New data transmission record set using a single laser and a single optical chip". Phys.org. October 23, 2022. Retrieved October 24, 2022.
- ^ "New data transmission record". Technical University of Denmark. October 20, 2022. Retrieved October 24, 2022.
- ^ a b Papadopoulos, Loukia (October 21, 2022). "This new farming robot uses lasers to kill 200,000 weeds per hour". interestingengineering.com. Retrieved November 17, 2022.
- ^ "Verdant Robotics launches multi-action agricultural robot for 'superhuman farming'". Robotics & Automation News. February 23, 2022. Retrieved November 17, 2022.
- ^ "Small Robot Company Tom, Dick, and Harry farm robots: The 200 Best Inventions of 2022". Time. Retrieved November 17, 2022.
- ^ ""SuperGPS" ditches satellites for radio towers for cm-scale tracking". New Atlas. November 17, 2022. Retrieved December 17, 2022.
- ^ Koelemeij, Jeroen C. J.; Dun, Han; Diouf, Cherif E. V.; Dierikx, Erik F.; Janssen, Gerard J. M.; Tiberius, Christian C. J. M. (November 2022). "A hybrid optical–wireless network for decimetre-level terrestrial positioning". Nature. 611 (7936): 473–478. arXiv:2305.14796. Bibcode:2022Natur.611..473K. doi:10.1038/s41586-022-05315-7. hdl:1871.1/83f83acb-b4fd-4c6f-ad01-84986e18f9bf. ISSN 1476-4687. PMID 36385540. S2CID 253555248.
- University press release: "A navigation system with 10 centimeter accuracy". Delft University of Technology via techxplore.com. Retrieved December 17, 2022.
- ^ "Impossible Metals demonstrates its super-careful seabed mining robot". New Atlas. December 8, 2022. Retrieved January 17, 2023.
- ^ "The online information environment" (PDF). Retrieved February 21, 2022.
- ^ Guy, Jack. "DNA reveals biggest-ever human family tree, dating back 100,000 years". CNN. Retrieved March 10, 2022.
- ^ Wong, Yan; Wohns, Anthony Wilder. "We're analysing DNA from ancient and modern humans to create a 'family tree of everyone'". Retrieved March 21, 2022.
- ^ Wohns, Anthony Wilder; Wong, Yan; Jeffery, Ben; Akbari, Ali; Mallick, Swapan; Pinhasi, Ron; Patterson, Nick; Reich, David; Kelleher, Jerome; McVean, Gil (February 25, 2022). "A unified genealogy of modern and ancient genomes". Science. 375 (6583): eabi8264. bioRxiv 10.1101/2021.02.16.431497v2. doi:10.1126/science.abi8264. ISSN 0036-8075. PMC 10027547. PMID 35201891. S2CID 247106458.
- ^ "Scientists create a global repository for cell engineering". Newcastle University via phys.org. Retrieved October 26, 2022.
- ^ Tellechea-Luzardo, Jonathan; Hobbs, Leanne; Velázquez, Elena; Pelechova, Lenka; Woods, Simon; de Lorenzo, Víctor; Krasnogor, Natalio (February 9, 2022). "Versioning biological cells for trustworthy cell engineering". Nature Communications. 13 (1): 765. Bibcode:2022NatCo..13..765T. doi:10.1038/s41467-022-28350-4. ISSN 2041-1723. PMC 8828774. PMID 35140226.
- ^ "Machine-learning models vulnerable to undetectable backdoors". The Register. Retrieved May 13, 2022.
- ^ "Undetectable Backdoors Plantable In Any Machine-Learning Algorithm". IEEE Spectrum. May 10, 2022. Retrieved May 13, 2022.
- ^ Goldwasser, Shafi; Kim, Michael P.; Vaikuntanathan, Vinod; Zamir, Or (April 14, 2022). "Planting Undetectable Backdoors in Machine Learning Models". arXiv:2204.06974 [cs.LG].
- ^ Yirka, Bob. "A computer system that analyzes chemical waste and proposes ways to make new products from it". phys.org. Retrieved May 12, 2022.
- ^ Wołos, Agnieszka; Koszelewski, Dominik; Roszak, Rafał; Szymkuć, Sara; Moskal, Martyna; Ostaszewski, Ryszard; Herrera, Brenden T.; Maier, Josef M.; Brezicki, Gordon; Samuel, Jonathon; Lummiss, Justin A. M.; McQuade, D. Tyler; Rogers, Luke; Grzybowski, Bartosz A. (April 2022). "Computer-designed repurposing of chemical wastes into drugs". Nature. 604 (7907): 668–676. Bibcode:2022Natur.604..668W. doi:10.1038/s41586-022-04503-9. ISSN 1476-4687. PMID 35478240. S2CID 248415772.
- ^ Frost, Rosie (May 9, 2022). "Plastic waste can now be found and monitored from space". euronews. Retrieved June 24, 2022.
- ^ "Global Plastic Watch". www.globalplasticwatch.org. Retrieved June 24, 2022.
- ^ a b Sauce, Bruno; Liebherr, Magnus; Judd, Nicholas; Klingberg, Torkel (May 11, 2022). "The impact of digital media on children's intelligence while controlling for genetic differences in cognition and socioeconomic background". Scientific Reports. 12 (1): 7720. Bibcode:2022NatSR..12.7720S. doi:10.1038/s41598-022-11341-2. ISSN 2045-2322. PMC 9095723. PMID 35545630.
- ^ "Video games can boost children's intelligence: study". Karolinska Institutet. Retrieved June 24, 2022.
- ^ Best, Jo (May 3, 2022). "From Ukraine to remote robotics: how videoconferencing and next generation technology are transforming surgery". BMJ. 377: o1078. doi:10.1136/bmj.o1078. PMID 35504650. S2CID 248497139. Retrieved June 24, 2022.
- ^ Garner, Ian (May 9, 2022). ""We've Got to Kill Them": Responses to Bucha on Russian Social Media Groups". Journal of Genocide Research: 1–8. doi:10.1080/14623528.2022.2074020. S2CID 248680376.
- ^ "In Ukraine war, a race to acquire smarter, deadlier drones". AP NEWS. July 14, 2022. Retrieved August 4, 2022.
- ^ Pearson, James; Bing, Christopher (May 10, 2022). "The cyber war between Ukraine and Russia: An overview". Reuters. Retrieved August 8, 2022.
- ^ Robertson, Nic. "Analysis: Drones, phones and satellites are exposing the truth about Russia's war in Ukraine in near real-time". CNN. Retrieved August 4, 2022.
- ^ "Instead of consumer software, Ukraine's tech workers build apps of war". Washington Post. Retrieved August 4, 2022.
- ^ "scienceforukraine". scienceforukraine.eu. Retrieved August 4, 2022.
- ^ Gaind, Nisha; Else, Holly; Roussi, Antoaneta (March 2, 2022). "'I thought I had forgotten this horror': Ukrainian scientists stand in defiance". Nature. 603 (7900): 210–211. Bibcode:2022Natur.603..210G. doi:10.1038/d41586-022-00621-6. PMID 35236954. S2CID 247219578.
- ^ "Single MRI scan of the brain could detect Alzheimer's disease". Physics World. July 13, 2022. Retrieved July 19, 2022.
- ^ Inglese, Marianna; Patel, Neva; Linton-Reid, Kristofer; Loreto, Flavia; Win, Zarni; Perry, Richard J.; Carswell, Christopher; Grech-Sollars, Matthew; Crum, William R.; Lu, Haonan; Malhotra, Paresh A.; Aboagye, Eric O. (June 20, 2022). "A predictive model using the mesoscopic architecture of the living brain to detect Alzheimer's disease". Communications Medicine. 2 (1): 70. doi:10.1038/s43856-022-00133-4. ISSN 2730-664X. PMC 9209493. PMID 35759330.
- ^ Ansari, Tasmia (September 13, 2022). "GitHub Is Part of Creator Economy, Just That It Won't Pay". Analytics India Magazine. Retrieved September 23, 2022.
- ^ Shimada, Naomichi; Xiao, Tao; Hata, Hideaki; Treude, Christoph; Matsumoto, Kenichi (May 2022). "GitHub sponsors: Exploring a new way to contribute to open source". Proceedings of the 44th International Conference on Software Engineering. pp. 1058–1069. doi:10.1145/3510003.3510116. ISBN 9781450392211. S2CID 246822794.
- ^ Hanley, Steve (July 4, 2022). "Latest Project Drawdown Update Adds 11 New Ways To Stop Global Heating". CleanTechnica. Retrieved July 21, 2022.
- ^ "Project Drawdown updates world's leading set of climate solutions—adding 11 new solutions for addressing the climate crisis". Project Drawdown. June 24, 2022. Retrieved July 21, 2022.
- ^ Gorman, Miranda R.; Dzombak, David A.; Frischmann, Chad (September 1, 2022). "Potential global GHG emissions reduction from increased adoption of metals recycling". Resources, Conservation and Recycling. 184: 106424. doi:10.1016/j.resconrec.2022.106424. ISSN 0921-3449. S2CID 249321004.
- ^ Harvey, George (July 4, 2022). "We Can Have (Just About) Everything We Want For Energy & The Climate". CleanTechnica. Retrieved July 21, 2022.
- ^ Jacobson, Mark Z.; Krauland, Anna-Katharina von; Coughlin, Stephen J.; Dukas, Emily; Nelson, Alexander J. H.; Palmer, Frances C.; Rasmussen, Kylie R. (June 28, 2022). "Low-cost solutions to global warming, air pollution, and energy insecurity for 145 countries" (PDF). Energy & Environmental Science. 15 (8): 3343–3359. doi:10.1039/D2EE00722C. ISSN 1754-5706. S2CID 250126767.
- ^ "DeepMind AI learns physics by watching videos that don't make sense". New Scientist. Retrieved August 21, 2022.
- ^ Piloto, Luis S.; Weinstein, Ari; Battaglia, Peter; Botvinick, Matthew (July 11, 2022). "Intuitive physics learning in a deep-learning model inspired by developmental psychology". Nature Human Behaviour. 6 (9): 1257–1267. doi:10.1038/s41562-022-01394-8. ISSN 2397-3374. PMC 9489531. PMID 35817932.
- ^ Feldman, Andrey (August 11, 2022). "Artificial physicist to unravel the laws of nature". Advanced Science News. Retrieved August 21, 2022.
- ^ Chen, Boyuan; Huang, Kuang; Raghupathi, Sunand; Chandratreya, Ishaan; Du, Qiang; Lipson, Hod (July 2022). "Automated discovery of fundamental variables hidden in experimental data". Nature Computational Science. 2 (7): 433–442. doi:10.1038/s43588-022-00281-6. ISSN 2662-8457. S2CID 251087119.
- ^ "Biologists train AI to generate medicines and vaccines". University of Washington-Harborview Medical Center.
- ^ Wang, Jue; Lisanza, Sidney; Juergens, David; Tischer, Doug; Watson, Joseph L.; Castro, Karla M.; Ragotte, Robert; Saragovi, Amijai; Milles, Lukas F.; Baek, Minkyung; Anishchenko, Ivan; Yang, Wei; Hicks, Derrick R.; Expòsit, Marc; Schlichthaerle, Thomas; Chun, Jung-Ho; Dauparas, Justas; Bennett, Nathaniel; Wicky, Basile I. M.; Muenks, Andrew; DiMaio, Frank; Correia, Bruno; Ovchinnikov, Sergey; Baker, David (July 22, 2022). "Scaffolding protein functional sites using deep learning" (PDF). Science. 377 (6604): 387–394. Bibcode:2022Sci...377..387W. doi:10.1126/science.abn2100. ISSN 0036-8075. PMC 9621694. PMID 35862514. S2CID 250953434.
- ^ "DeepMind uncovers structure of 200m proteins in scientific leap forward". The Guardian. July 28, 2022. Retrieved July 28, 2022.
- ^ "AlphaFold reveals the structure of the protein universe". DeepMind. July 28, 2022. Retrieved July 28, 2022.
- ^ Quach, Katyanna. "Harvard boffins build multimodal AI system to predict cancer". The Register. Retrieved September 16, 2022.
- ^ Chen, Richard J.; Lu, Ming Y.; Williamson, Drew F. K.; Chen, Tiffany Y.; Lipkova, Jana; Noor, Zahra; Shaban, Muhammad; Shady, Maha; Williams, Mane; Joo, Bumjin; Mahmood, Faisal (August 8, 2022). "Pan-cancer integrative histology-genomic analysis via multimodal deep learning". Cancer Cell. 40 (8): 865–878.e6. doi:10.1016/j.ccell.2022.07.004. ISSN 1535-6108. PMC 10397370. PMID 35944502. S2CID 251456162.
- Teaching hospital press release: "New AI technology integrates multiple data types to predict cancer outcomes". Brigham and Women's Hospital via medicalxpress.com. Retrieved September 18, 2022.
- ^ Axon, Samuel (August 18, 2022). "For the first time ever, more people watched streaming TV than cable". Ars Technica. Retrieved September 23, 2022.
- ^ "Streaming claims largest piece of TV viewing pie in July". Nielsen. Retrieved September 23, 2022.
- ^ a b "TikTok can track users' every tap as they visit other sites through iOS app, new research shows". The Guardian. August 24, 2022. Retrieved September 16, 2022.
- ^ a b "iOS Privacy: Announcing InAppBrowser.com - see what JavaScript commands get injected through an in-app browser · Felix Krause". krausefx.com. Retrieved September 16, 2022.
- ^ Fetzer, Mary. "Automatic device driver isolation protects against bugs in operating systems". Pennsylvania State University via techxplore.com. Retrieved September 15, 2022.
- ^ Huang, Yongzhe; Narayanan, Vikram; Detweiler, David; Huang, Kaiming; Tan, Gang; Jaeger, Trent; Burtsev, Anton (2022). "KSplit: Automating Device Driver Isolation" (PDF). Retrieved September 15, 2022.
- ^ "Fine-grained kernel isolation". mars-research.github.io. Retrieved September 15, 2022.
- ^ "Google Deepmind Researcher Co-Authors Paper Saying AI Will Eliminate Humanity". Vice. Retrieved September 23, 2022.
- ^ Cohen, Michael K.; Hutter, Marcus; Osborne, Michael A. (August 29, 2022). "Advanced artificial agents intervene in the provision of reward". AI Magazine. 43 (3): 282–293. doi:10.1002/aaai.12064. ISSN 0738-4602. S2CID 235489158.
- ^ "An AI-Generated Artwork Won First Place at a State Fair Fine Arts Competition, and Artists Are Pissed". Vice. Retrieved September 15, 2022.
- ^ Ocampo, Rodolfo. "AI art is everywhere right now. Even experts don't know what it will mean". techxplore.com. Retrieved September 15, 2022.
- ^ "As AI-generated art takes off - who really owns it?". Thomson Reuters Foundation. Retrieved September 15, 2022.
- ^ Edwards, Benj (September 12, 2022). "Flooded with AI-generated images, some art communities ban them completely". Ars Technica. Retrieved September 15, 2022.
- ^ Wiggers, Kyle (August 24, 2022). "Deepfakes: Uncensored AI art model prompts ethics questions". TechCrunch. Retrieved September 15, 2022.
- ^ "AI is reshaping creativity, and maybe that's a good thing". Dazed. August 18, 2022. Retrieved September 15, 2022.
- ^ "AI-generated art illustrates another problem with computers | John Naughton". The Guardian. August 20, 2022. Retrieved September 15, 2022.
- ^ Gal, Rinon; Alaluf, Yuval; Atzmon, Yuval; Patashnik, Or; Bermano, Amit H.; Chechik, Gal; Cohen-Or, Daniel (August 2, 2022). "An Image is Worth One Word: Personalizing Text-to-Image Generation using Textual Inversion". arXiv:2208.01618 [cs.CV].
- ^ "DALL-E can now help you imagine what's outside the frame of famous paintings". The Verge. Retrieved September 15, 2022.
- ^ "Stable Diffusion". CompVis - Machine Vision and Learning LMU Munich. September 15, 2022. Retrieved September 15, 2022.
- ^ a b Edwards, Benj (September 6, 2022). "With Stable Diffusion, you may never believe what you see online again". Ars Technica. Retrieved September 15, 2022.
- ^ "Stable Diffusion Public Release". Stability.Ai. Retrieved September 15, 2022.
- ^ "Satellites now get full-year view of Arctic sea-ice". BBC News. September 14, 2022. Retrieved September 15, 2022.
- ^ Landy, Jack C.; Dawson, Geoffrey J.; Tsamados, Michel; Bushuk, Mitchell; Stroeve, Julienne C.; Howell, Stephen E. L.; Krumpen, Thomas; Babb, David G.; Komarov, Alexander S.; Heorton, Harry D. B. S.; Belter, H. Jakob; Aksenov, Yevgeny (September 2022). "A year-round satellite sea-ice thickness record from CryoSat-2" (PDF). Nature. 609 (7927): 517–522. Bibcode:2022Natur.609..517L. doi:10.1038/s41586-022-05058-5. hdl:10037/26936. ISSN 1476-4687. PMID 36104558. S2CID 252282906.
- University press release: "For the first time we can measure the thickness of Arctic sea ice all year round". UiT The Arctic University of Norway via EurekAlert!. September 14, 2022. Retrieved September 15, 2022.
- ^ Tucker, Emma (September 18, 2022). "TikTok's search engine repeatedly delivers misinformation to its majority-young user base, report says | CNN Business". CNN. Retrieved October 19, 2022.
- ^ "Misinformation Monitor: September 2022". NewsGuard. Retrieved October 19, 2022.
- ^ "Explainer: Understanding Ethereum's major 'proof of stake' upgrade". NBC News. Retrieved October 20, 2022.
- ^ "Can AI's Recommendations Be Less Insidious?". IEEE Spectrum. October 2, 2022. Retrieved October 26, 2022.
- ^ Carroll, Micah D.; Dragan, Anca; Russell, Stuart; Hadfield-Menell, Dylan (June 28, 2022). "Estimating and Penalizing Induced Preference Shifts in Recommender Systems". International Conference on Machine Learning. PMLR: 2686–2708. arXiv:2204.11966. Retrieved October 26, 2022.
- ^ "Researchers report genomic profiling from more than 110,000 tumors". News-Medical.net. July 19, 2022. Retrieved November 20, 2022.
- ^ Klein, Harry; Mazor, Tali; Siegel, Ethan; Trukhanov, Pavel; Ovalle, Andrea; Vecchio Fitz, Catherine Del; Zwiesler, Zachary; Kumari, Priti; Van Der Veen, Bernd; Marriott, Eric; Hansel, Jason; Yu, Joyce; Albayrak, Adem; Barry, Susan; Keller, Rachel B.; MacConaill, Laura E.; Lindeman, Neal; Johnson, Bruce E.; Rollins, Barrett J.; Do, Khanh T.; Beardslee, Brian; Shapiro, Geoffrey; Hector-Barry, Suzanne; Methot, John; Sholl, Lynette; Lindsay, James; Hassett, Michael J.; Cerami, Ethan (October 6, 2022). "MatchMiner: an open-source platform for cancer precision medicine". npj Precision Oncology. 6 (1): 69. doi:10.1038/s41698-022-00312-5. ISSN 2397-768X. PMC 9537311. PMID 36202909.
- ^ ""Anna's Archive" Opens the Door to Z-Library and Other Pirate Libraries * TorrentFreak". TorrentFreak. Retrieved December 18, 2022.
- ^ "'Shadow Libraries' Are Moving Their Pirated Books to The Dark Web After Fed Crackdowns". Vice. Retrieved December 18, 2022.
- ^ Fadelli, Ingrid. "Study assesses the quality of AI literary translations by comparing them with human translations". techxplore.com. Retrieved December 18, 2022.
- ^ Thai, Katherine; Karpinska, Marzena; Krishna, Kalpesh; Ray, Bill; Inghilleri, Moira; Wieting, John; Iyyer, Mohit (October 25, 2022). "Exploring Document-Level Literary Machine Translation with Parallel Paragraphs from World Literature". arXiv:2210.14250 [cs.CL].
- ^ Cockburn, Harry (November 9, 2022). "Global oil and gas emissions 'up to three times higher than companies claim'". The Independent. Retrieved December 18, 2022.
- ^ "Emissions Map - Climate TRACE". climatetrace.org. Retrieved December 18, 2022.
- Press release: "News - Climate TRACE". Retrieved December 18, 2022.
- ^ Ortutay, Barbara. "Twitter drama too much? Mastodon, others emerge as options". techxplore.com. Retrieved December 18, 2022.
- ^ Urbain, Thomas. "What could a world without Twitter look like?". techxplore.com. Retrieved December 18, 2022.
- ^ "The best Twitter alternatives". ZDNET. Retrieved December 18, 2022.
- ^ Zewe, Adam. "Empowering social media users to assess content helps fight misinformation". Massachusetts Institute of Technology via techxplore.com. Retrieved December 18, 2022.
- ^ Jahanbakhsh, Farnaz; Zhang, Amy X.; Karger, David R. (November 11, 2022). "Leveraging Structured Trusted-Peer Assessments to Combat Misinformation". Proceedings of the ACM on Human-Computer Interaction. 6 (CSCW2): 524:1–524:40. doi:10.1145/3555637.
- ^ Jahanbakhsh, Farnaz; Zhang, Amy X.; Karahalios, Karrie; Karger, David R. (November 11, 2022). "Our Browser Extension Lets Readers Change the Headlines on News Articles, and You Won't Believe What They Did!". Proceedings of the ACM on Human-Computer Interaction. 6 (CSCW2): 530:1–530:33. doi:10.1145/3555643.
- ^ "New MIT Sloan research measures exposure to misinformation from political elites on Twitter". AP NEWS. November 29, 2022. Retrieved December 18, 2022.
- ^ Mosleh, Mohsen; Rand, David G. (November 21, 2022). "Measuring exposure to misinformation from political elites on Twitter". Nature Communications. 13 (1): 7144. Bibcode:2022NatCo..13.7144M. doi:10.1038/s41467-022-34769-6. ISSN 2041-1723. PMC 9681735. PMID 36414634.
- ^ Fadelli, Ingrid. "LaundroGraph: Using deep learning to support anti-money laundering efforts". techxplore.com. Retrieved December 18, 2022.
- ^ Cardoso, Mário; Saleiro, Pedro; Bizarro, Pedro (October 26, 2022). "LaundroGraph: Self-Supervised Graph Representation Learning for Anti-Money Laundering". Proceedings of the Third ACM International Conference on AI in Finance. Association for Computing Machinery. pp. 130–138. arXiv:2210.14360. doi:10.1145/3533271.3561727. ISBN 9781450393768. S2CID 253022343.
- ^ Patringenaru, Ioana. "New web tracking technique is bypassing privacy protections". University of California-San Diego via techxplore.com. Retrieved January 18, 2023.
- ^ Randall, Audrey; Snyder, Peter; Ukani, Alisha; Snoeren, Alex C.; Voelker, Geoffrey M.; Savage, Stefan; Schulman, Aaron (October 25, 2022). "Measuring UID smuggling in the wild". Proceedings of the 22nd ACM Internet Measurement Conference. Association for Computing Machinery. pp. 230–243. doi:10.1145/3517745.3561415. ISBN 9781450392594. S2CID 250494286.
- ^ "OpenAI releases Point-E, an AI that generates 3D models". Tech Crunch. December 20, 2022. Retrieved December 20, 2022.
- ^ Nichol, Alex; Jun, Heewoo; Dhariwal, Prafulla; Mishkin, Pamela; Chen, Mark (December 16, 2022). "Point-E: A System for Generating 3D Point Clouds from Complex Prompts". arXiv:2212.08751 [cs.CV].
- ^ a b "What ChatGPT Could Mean for the Metaverse". Time. Retrieved February 2, 2023.
- ^ "Rapidly Generate 3D Assets for Virtual Worlds with Generative AI". NVIDIA Technical Blog. January 3, 2023. Retrieved February 2, 2023.
- ^ Edwards, Benj (November 21, 2022). "3D for everyone? Nvidia's Magic3D can generate 3D models from text". Ars Technica. Retrieved February 2, 2023.
- ^ "Laser bursts drive fastest-ever logic gates". University of Rochester. May 11, 2022. Retrieved May 13, 2022.
- ^ Boolakee, Tobias; Heide, Christian; Garzón-Ramírez, Antonio; Weber, Heiko B.; Franco, Ignacio; Hommelhoff, Peter (May 2022). "Light-field control of real and virtual charge carriers". Nature. 605 (7909): 251–255. arXiv:2203.03509. Bibcode:2022Natur.605..251B. doi:10.1038/s41586-022-04565-9. ISSN 1476-4687. PMID 35546189. S2CID 247292038.
- ^ "New life cycle assessment study shows useful life of tech-critical metals to be short". University of Bayreuth. Retrieved June 23, 2022.
- ^ Charpentier Poncelet, Alexandre; Helbig, Christoph; Loubet, Philippe; Beylot, Antoine; Muller, Stéphanie; Villeneuve, Jacques; Laratte, Bertrand; Thorenz, Andrea; Tuma, Axel; Sonnemann, Guido (May 19, 2022). "Losses and lifetimes of metals in the economy" (PDF). Nature Sustainability. 5 (8): 717–726. doi:10.1038/s41893-022-00895-8. ISSN 2398-9629. S2CID 248894322.
- ^ "Scientists grew living human skin around a robotic finger". Science News. June 9, 2022. Retrieved July 20, 2022.
- ^ Kawai, Michio; Nie, Minghao; Oda, Haruka; Morimoto, Yuya; Takeuchi, Shoji (July 6, 2022). "Living skin on a robot". Matter. 5 (7): 2190–2208. doi:10.1016/j.matt.2022.05.019. ISSN 2590-2393.
- ^ Barker, Ross. "Artificial skin capable of feeling pain could lead to new generation of touch-sensitive robots". University of Glasgow. Retrieved July 20, 2022.
- ^ Liu, Fengyuan; Deswal, Sweety; Christou, Adamos; Shojaei Baghini, Mahdieh; Chirila, Radu; Shakthivel, Dhayalan; Chakraborty, Moupali; Dahiya, Ravinder (June 2022). "Printed synaptic transistor–based electronic skin for robots to feel and learn" (PDF). Science Robotics. 7 (67): eabl7286. doi:10.1126/scirobotics.abl7286. ISSN 2470-9476. PMID 35648845. S2CID 249275626.
- ^ Velasco, Emily. "Artificial skin gives robots sense of touch and beyond". California Institute of Technology. Retrieved July 20, 2022.
- ^ Yu, You; Li, Jiahong; Solomon, Samuel A.; Min, Jihong; Tu, Jiaobing; Guo, Wei; Xu, Changhao; Song, Yu; Gao, Wei (June 1, 2022). "All-printed soft human-machine interface for robotic physicochemical sensing". Science Robotics. 7 (67): eabn0495. doi:10.1126/scirobotics.abn0495. ISSN 2470-9476. PMC 9302713. PMID 35648844.
- ^ Yirka, Bob. "Biomimetic elastomeric robot skin has tactile sensing abilities". techxplore.com. Retrieved July 23, 2022.
- ^ Park, K.; Yuk, H.; Yang, M.; Cho, J.; Lee, H.; Kim, J. (June 8, 2022). "A biomimetic elastomeric robot skin using electrical impedance and acoustic tomography for tactile sensing". Science Robotics. 7 (67): eabm7187. doi:10.1126/scirobotics.abm7187. ISSN 2470-9476. PMID 35675452. S2CID 249520303.
- ^ Porter, Jon (June 30, 2022). "Samsung beats TSMC to production of 3nm chips". The Verge. Retrieved September 3, 2022.
- ^ "Samsung Begins Chip Production Using 3nm Process Technology With GAA Architecture". Samsung. June 30, 2022. Retrieved July 3, 2022.
- ^ "'Artificial synapse' could make neural networks work more like brains". New Scientist. Retrieved August 21, 2022.
- ^ Onen, Murat; Emond, Nicolas; Wang, Baoming; Zhang, Difei; Ross, Frances M.; Li, Ju; Yildiz, Bilge; del Alamo, Jesús A. (July 29, 2022). "Nanosecond protonic programmable resistors for analog deep learning" (PDF). Science. 377 (6605): 539–543. Bibcode:2022Sci...377..539O. doi:10.1126/science.abp8064. ISSN 0036-8075. PMID 35901152. S2CID 251159631.
- ^ "Artificial neuron swaps dopamine with rat brain cells like a real one". New Scientist. Retrieved September 16, 2022.
- ^ Wang, Ting; Wang, Ming; Wang, Jianwu; Yang, Le; Ren, Xueyang; Song, Gang; Chen, Shisheng; Yuan, Yuehui; Liu, Ruiqing; Pan, Liang; Li, Zheng; Leow, Wan Ru; Luo, Yifei; Ji, Shaobo; Cui, Zequn; He, Ke; Zhang, Feilong; Lv, Fengting; Tian, Yuanyuan; Cai, Kaiyu; Yang, Bowen; Niu, Jingyi; Zou, Haochen; Liu, Songrui; Xu, Guoliang; Fan, Xing; Hu, Benhui; Loh, Xian Jun; Wang, Lianhui; Chen, Xiaodong (August 8, 2022). "A chemically mediated artificial neuron". Nature Electronics. 5 (9): 586–595. doi:10.1038/s41928-022-00803-0. hdl:10356/163240. ISSN 2520-1131. S2CID 251464760.
- ^ "Researchers discover a material that can learn like the brain". Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne. Retrieved September 15, 2022.
- ^ Samizadeh Nikoo, Mohammad; Soleimanzadeh, Reza; Krammer, Anna; Migliato Marega, Guilherme; Park, Yunkyu; Son, Junwoo; Schueler, Andreas; Kis, Andras; Moll, Philip J. W.; Matioli, Elison (August 22, 2022). "Electrical control of glass-like dynamics in vanadium dioxide for data storage and processing". Nature Electronics. 5 (9): 596–603. doi:10.1038/s41928-022-00812-z. ISSN 2520-1131. S2CID 251759964.
- ^ "How cyborg cockroaches could be used to save people trapped under earthquake rubble". ABC News. September 22, 2022. Retrieved October 20, 2022.
- ^ Kakei, Yujiro; Katayama, Shumpei; Lee, Shinyoung; Takakuwa, Masahito; Furusawa, Kazuya; Umezu, Shinjiro; Sato, Hirotaka; Fukuda, Kenjiro; Someya, Takao (September 5, 2022). "Integration of body-mounted ultrasoft organic solar cell on cyborg insects with intact mobility". npj Flexible Electronics. 6 (1): 1–9. doi:10.1038/s41528-022-00207-2. ISSN 2397-4621.
- Research institute press release: "Robo-bug: A rechargeable, remote-controllable cyborg cockroach". RIKEN via techxplore.com. Retrieved October 20, 2022.
- ^ Sarkar, Tanmoy; Lieberth, Katharina; Pavlou, Aristea; Frank, Thomas; Mailaender, Volker; McCulloch, Iain; Blom, Paul W. M.; Torriccelli, Fabrizio; Gkoupidenis, Paschalis (November 7, 2022). "An organic artificial spiking neuron for in situ neuromorphic sensing and biointerfacing". Nature Electronics. 5 (11): 774–783. doi:10.1038/s41928-022-00859-y. ISSN 2520-1131. S2CID 253413801.
- ^ "Artificial neurons emulate biological counterparts to enable synergetic operation". Nature Electronics. 5 (11): 721–722. November 10, 2022. doi:10.1038/s41928-022-00862-3. ISSN 2520-1131. S2CID 253469402.
- ^ "Why we should worry about computer suffering". IAI TV – Changing how the world thinks. March 2, 2021. Retrieved March 8, 2021.
- ^ Thomas Metzinger (February 19, 2021). "Artificial Suffering: An Argument for a Global Moratorium on Synthetic Phenomenology". Journal of Artificial Intelligence and Consciousness. 08: 43–66. doi:10.1142/S270507852150003X. ISSN 2705-0785. Available under CC BY 4.0.
- ^ "FAO – News Article: Food systems account for more than one third of global greenhouse gas emissions". www.fao.org. Retrieved April 22, 2021.
- ^ Crippa, M.; Solazzo, E.; Guizzardi, D.; Monforti-Ferrario, F.; Tubiello, F. N.; Leip, A. (March 2021). "Food systems are responsible for a third of global anthropogenic GHG emissions". Nature Food. 2 (3): 198–209. doi:10.1038/s43016-021-00225-9. ISSN 2662-1355. PMID 37117443.
- ^ "Average westerner's eating habits lead to loss of four trees every year". the Guardian. March 29, 2021. Retrieved April 19, 2021.
- ^ Hoang, Nguyen Tien; Kanemoto, Keiichiro (March 29, 2021). "Mapping the deforestation footprint of nations reveals growing threat to tropical forests". Nature Ecology & Evolution. 5 (6): 845–853. doi:10.1038/s41559-021-01417-z. ISSN 2397-334X. PMID 33782576. S2CID 232420306. Retrieved April 19, 2021.
- ^ Lu, Donna. "Bitcoin mining emissions in China will hit 130 million tonnes by 2024". New Scientist. Retrieved May 9, 2021.
- ^ Jiang, Shangrong; Li, Yuze; Lu, Quanying; Hong, Yongmiao; Guan, Dabo; Xiong, Yu; Wang, Shouyang (April 6, 2021). "Policy assessments for the carbon emission flows and sustainability of Bitcoin blockchain operation in China". Nature Communications. 12 (1): 1938. Bibcode:2021NatCo..12.1938J. doi:10.1038/s41467-021-22256-3. ISSN 2041-1723. PMC 8024295. PMID 33824331. Available under CC BY 4.0.
- ^ "Elon Musk's Neuralink 'shows monkey playing Pong with mind'". BBC. April 9, 2021. Retrieved April 10, 2021.
- ^ "Monkey MindPong". Neuralink. April 9, 2021. Retrieved April 10, 2021.
- ^ "Elon Musk startup shows monkey with brain chip implants playing video game". The Guardian. April 9, 2021. Retrieved April 10, 2021.
- ^ a b Kleiner, Kurt (August 25, 2022). "Making computer chips act more like brain cells". Knowable Magazine | Annual Reviews. doi:10.1146/knowable-082422-1. Retrieved September 23, 2022.
- ^ Gumyusenge, Aristide; Melianas, Armantas; Keene, Scott T.; Salleo, Alberto (July 26, 2021). "Materials Strategies for Organic Neuromorphic Devices". Annual Review of Materials Research. 51 (1): 47–71. Bibcode:2021AnRMS..51...47G. doi:10.1146/annurev-matsci-080619-111402. ISSN 1531-7331. S2CID 234837472.
- ^ "Overcoming tab overload: Researchers develop tool to better manage browser tabs". techxplore.com. Retrieved June 14, 2021.
- ^ Chang, Joseph Chee; Hahn, Nathan; Kim, Yongsung; Coupland, Julina; Breneisen, Bradley; Kim, Hannah S; Hwong, John; Kittur, Aniket (May 6, 2021). "When the Tab Comes Due:Challenges in the Cost Structure of Browser Tab Usage". Proceedings of the 2021 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems. Association for Computing Machinery. pp. 1–15. doi:10.1145/3411764.3445585. ISBN 9781450380966. S2CID 233987809. Available under CC BY 4.0.
- ^ "Cyber attack shuts down U.S. fuel pipeline 'jugular,' Biden briefed". Reuters. May 8, 2021. Retrieved June 13, 2021.
- ^ "Tiny, Wireless, Injectable Chips Use Ultrasound to Monitor Body Processes". Columbia University. May 12, 2021. Retrieved May 14, 2021.
- ^ Shi, Chen; Andino-Pavlovsky, Victoria; Lee, Stephen A.; Costa, Tiago; Elloian, Jeffrey; Konofagou, Elisa E.; Shepard, Kenneth L. (May 1, 2021). "Application of a sub–0.1-mm3 implantable mote for in vivo real-time wireless temperature sensing". Science Advances. 7 (19): eabf6312. Bibcode:2021SciA....7.6312S. doi:10.1126/sciadv.abf6312. ISSN 2375-2548. PMC 8104878. PMID 33962948.
- ^ "Brain Computer Interface Turns Mental Handwriting into Text on Screen". Howard Hughes Medical Institute. May 12, 2021. Retrieved May 14, 2021.
- ^ Willett, Francis R.; Avansino, Donald T.; Hochberg, Leigh R.; Henderson, Jaimie M.; Shenoy, Krishna V. (May 2021). "High-performance brain-to-text communication via handwriting". Nature. 593 (7858): 249–254. Bibcode:2021Natur.593..249W. doi:10.1038/s41586-021-03506-2. ISSN 1476-4687. PMC 8163299. PMID 33981047.
- ^ "Archivists Want to Make Sci-Hub 'Un-Censorable'". Gizmodo. Retrieved June 13, 2021.
- ^ "Google showed off its next-generation AI by talking to Pluto and a paper airplane". The Verge. May 18, 2021. Retrieved May 21, 2021.
- ^ "LaMDA: our breakthrough conversation technology". Google. May 18, 2021. Retrieved May 21, 2021.
- ^ "Google and Harvard map brain connections in unprecedented detail". New Atlas. June 2, 2021. Retrieved June 13, 2021.
- ^ Shapson-Coe, Alexander; Januszewski, Michał; Berger, Daniel R.; Pope, Art; Wu, Yuelong; Blakely, Tim; Schalek, Richard L.; Li, Peter; Wang, Shuohong; Maitin-Shepard, Jeremy; Karlupia, Neha; Dorkenwald, Sven; Sjostedt, Evelina; Leavitt, Laramie; Lee, Dongil; Bailey, Luke; Fitzmaurice, Angerica; Kar, Rohin; Field, Benjamin; Wu, Hank; Wagner-Carena, Julian; Aley, David; Lau, Joanna; Lin, Zudi; Wei, Donglai; Pfister, Hanspeter; Peleg, Adi; Jain, Viren; Lichtman, Jeff W. (May 30, 2021). "A connectomic study of a petascale fragment of human cerebral cortex". bioRxiv: 2021.05.29.446289. doi:10.1101/2021.05.29.446289. S2CID 235270687. Retrieved June 13, 2021.
- ^ Diario Oficial, numero 110, tomo n° 431, 9 de junio de 2021 Archived June 12, 2021, at the Wayback Machine, Official Journal of El Salvador, National Press of El Salvador
- ^ Gorjón, S. (2021). The role of cryptoassets as legal tender: the example of El Salvador. Banco de Espana Article, 35, 21.
- ^ Kharpal, Arjun (June 9, 2021). "El Salvador is one step closer to making bitcoin legal tender after proposing new law". msn.com. CNBC on MSN.com. Archived from the original on June 9, 2021. Retrieved June 9, 2021.
- ^ "GitHub's automatic coding tool rests on untested legal ground". The Verge. July 7, 2021. Retrieved July 11, 2021.
- ^ "GitHub Copilot · Your AI pair programmer". GitHub Copilot. Retrieved April 7, 2022.
- ^ Claburn, Thomas. "FauxPilot: Like GitHub Copilot without Microsoft telemetry". www.theregister.com. Retrieved September 23, 2022.
- ^ "Smart technology is not making us dumber: study". phys.org. Retrieved August 14, 2021.
- ^ Cecutti, Lorenzo; Chemero, Anthony; Lee, Spike W. S. (July 1, 2021). "Technology may change cognition without necessarily harming it". Nature Human Behaviour. 5 (8): 973–975. doi:10.1038/s41562-021-01162-0. ISSN 2397-3374. PMID 34211150. S2CID 235709853. Retrieved August 14, 2021.
- ^ "Amazon shifts Lumberyard to open source 3D game engine supported by 20 companies". VentureBeat. July 6, 2021. Retrieved September 3, 2022.
- ^ "Think before you 'speak': brain–computer interface restores speech in paralysed man". Physics World. August 5, 2021. Retrieved August 14, 2021.
- ^ Moses, David A.; Metzger, Sean L.; Liu, Jessie R.; Anumanchipalli, Gopala K.; Makin, Joseph G.; Sun, Pengfei F.; Chartier, Josh; Dougherty, Maximilian E.; Liu, Patricia M.; Abrams, Gary M.; Tu-Chan, Adelyn; Ganguly, Karunesh; Chang, Edward F. (July 15, 2021). "Neuroprosthesis for Decoding Speech in a Paralyzed Person with Anarthria". New England Journal of Medicine. 385 (3): 217–227. doi:10.1056/NEJMoa2027540. PMC 8972947. PMID 34260835. S2CID 235907121.
- ^ "Internet: Un nouveau record de débit à 319 Tbit/S". July 16, 2021.
- ^ Fox, Will. "Japan sets new Internet speed record: 319 Tbit/s". www.futuretimeline.net.
- ^ "Teens around the world are lonelier than a decade ago. The reason may be smartphones". Washington Post. Retrieved August 14, 2021.
- ^ Twenge, Jean M.; Haidt, Jonathan; Blake, Andrew B.; McAllister, Cooper; Lemon, Hannah; Le Roy, Astrid (July 20, 2021). "Worldwide increases in adolescent loneliness". Journal of Adolescence. 93: 257–269. doi:10.1016/j.adolescence.2021.06.006. ISSN 0140-1971. PMID 34294429.
- ^ "DeepMind's AI predicts structures for a vast trove of proteins". Nature. July 22, 2021. Retrieved August 1, 2021.
- ^ "Chinese team hopes high-res image of monkey brain will unlock secrets". South China Morning Post. August 1, 2021. Retrieved August 13, 2021.
- ^ Xu, Fang; Shen, Yan; Ding, Lufeng; Yang, Chao-Yu; Tan, Heng; Wang, Hao; Zhu, Qingyuan; Xu, Rui; Wu, Fengyi; Xiao, Yanyang; Xu, Cheng; Li, Qianwei; Su, Peng; Zhang, Li I.; Dong, Hong-Wei; Desimone, Robert; Xu, Fuqiang; Hu, Xintian; Lau, Pak-Ming; Bi, Guo-Qiang (July 26, 2021). "High-throughput mapping of a whole rhesus monkey brain at micrometer resolution". Nature Biotechnology. 39 (12): 1521–1528. doi:10.1038/s41587-021-00986-5. ISSN 1546-1696. PMID 34312500. S2CID 236453498.
- ^ "Computer scientist warns global internet is not prepared for a large solar storm". techxplore.com. Retrieved September 22, 2021.
- ^ "A Bad Solar Storm Could Cause an 'Internet Apocalypse'". Wired. Retrieved September 22, 2021.
- ^ Jyothi, Sangeetha Abdu (August 9, 2021). "Solar superstorms: Planning for an internet apocalypse". Proceedings of the 2021 ACM SIGCOMM 2021 Conference. Association for Computing Machinery. pp. 692–704. doi:10.1145/3452296.3472916. ISBN 9781450383837.
- ^ "Analysis | We Need Cap-and-Trade For Individuals As Well As Companies". Washington Post. Retrieved September 21, 2021.
- ^ "Pandemic and digitalization set stage for revival of a cast-off idea: Personal carbon allowances". phys.org.
- ^ Fuso Nerini, Francesco; Fawcett, Tina; Parag, Yael; Ekins, Paul (August 16, 2021). "Personal carbon allowances revisited". Nature Sustainability. 4 (12): 1025–1031. doi:10.1038/s41893-021-00756-w. ISSN 2398-9629.
- ^ "This massive AI chip has the compute power of a human brain". PC World. August 24, 2021. Retrieved August 28, 2021.
- ^ "AI may predict the next virus to jump from animals to humans". Public Library of Science. Retrieved October 19, 2021.
- ^ Mollentze, Nardus; Babayan, Simon A.; Streicker, Daniel G. (September 28, 2021). "Identifying and prioritizing potential human-infecting viruses from their genome sequences". PLOS Biology. 19 (9): e3001390. doi:10.1371/journal.pbio.3001390. ISSN 1545-7885. PMC 8478193. PMID 34582436.
- ^ Isaac, Mike; Frenkel, Sheera (October 4, 2021). "Facebook and all of its apps go down simultaneously". The New York Times. Archived from the original on October 4, 2021. Retrieved October 4, 2021.
- ^ Clark, Mitchell (October 4, 2021). "What is BGP, and what role did it play in Facebook's massive outage". The Verge. Retrieved November 15, 2021.
- ^ "Study reveals scale of data-sharing from Android mobile phones". Trinity College Dublin. Retrieved November 16, 2021.
- ^ Liu, Haoyu; Patras, Paul; Leith, Douglas J. (October 6, 2021). "Android Mobile OS Snooping By Samsung, Xiaomi, Huawei and Realme Handsets" (PDF). Retrieved November 16, 2021.
- ^ Wills, Jennifer. "Saying farewell to a throwaway fashion industry". Horizon: The EU Research Innovation Magazine. Retrieved November 15, 2021.
- ^ Fadelli, Ingrid. "DeepDraper: A technique that predicts how clothes would look on different people". Tech Xplore. Retrieved November 15, 2021.
- ^ "Scientists claim big advance in using DNA to store data". bbc.co.uk. December 2, 2021. Retrieved December 3, 2021.
- ^ Yirka, Bob. "A mass of human brain cells in a petri dish has been taught to play Pong". medicalxpress.com. Retrieved January 16, 2022.
- ^ Kagan, Brett J.; Kitchen, Andy C.; Tran, Nhi T.; Parker, Bradyn J.; Bhat, Anjali; Rollo, Ben; Razi, Adeel; Friston, Karl J. (December 3, 2021). "In vitro neurons learn and exhibit sentience when embodied in a simulated game-world". pp. 2021.12.02.471005. bioRxiv 10.1101/2021.12.02.471005v2.
- ^ Bolakhe, Saugat. "Lego Robot with an Organic 'Brain' Learns to Navigate a Maze". Scientific American. Retrieved February 1, 2022.
- ^ Krauhausen, Imke; Koutsouras, Dimitrios A.; Melianas, Armantas; Keene, Scott T.; Lieberth, Katharina; Ledanseur, Hadrien; Sheelamanthula, Rajendar; Giovannitti, Alexander; Torricelli, Fabrizio; Mcculloch, Iain; Blom, Paul W. M.; Salleo, Alberto; Burgt, Yoeri van de; Gkoupidenis, Paschalis (December 2021). "Organic neuromorphic electronics for sensorimotor integration and learning in robotics". Science Advances. 7 (50): eabl5068. Bibcode:2021SciA....7.5068K. doi:10.1126/sciadv.abl5068. hdl:10754/673986. PMC 8664264. PMID 34890232. S2CID 245046482.
- ^ Qureshi, Muhammad Saad; Oasmaa, Anja; Pihkola, Hanna; Deviatkin, Ivan; Tenhunen, Anna; Mannila, Juha; Minkkinen, Hannu; Pohjakallio, Maija; Laine-Ylijoki, Jutta (November 1, 2020). "Pyrolysis of plastic waste: Opportunities and challenges". Journal of Analytical and Applied Pyrolysis. 152: 104804. doi:10.1016/j.jaap.2020.104804. ISSN 0165-2370. S2CID 200068035.
- ^ "Breakthrough in separating plastic waste: Machines can now distinguish 12 different types of plastic". Aarhus University. Retrieved January 19, 2022.
- ^ Henriksen, Martin L.; Karlsen, Celine B.; Klarskov, Pernille; Hinge, Mogens (January 1, 2022). "Plastic classification via in-line hyperspectral camera analysis and unsupervised machine learning". Vibrational Spectroscopy. 118: 103329. doi:10.1016/j.vibspec.2021.103329. ISSN 0924-2031. S2CID 244913832.
- ^ "Telemedicine may be as good as in-person visits for managing chronic illnesses". UPI. Retrieved January 17, 2022.
- ^ Albritton, Jordan; Ortiz, Alexa; Wines, Roberta; Booth, Graham; DiBello, Michael; Brown, Stephen; Gartlehner, Gerald; Crotty, Karen (December 7, 2021). "Video Teleconferencing for Disease Prevention, Diagnosis, and Treatment" (PDF). Annals of Internal Medicine. 175 (2): 256–266. doi:10.7326/m21-3511. ISSN 0003-4819. PMID 34871056. S2CID 244923066.
- ^ "The 'most serious' security breach ever is unfolding right now. Here's what you need to know". Washington Post. December 20, 2021. Retrieved January 16, 2022.
- ^ "After Log4j, Open-Source Software Is Now a National Security Issue". Gizmodo. Retrieved January 16, 2022.
- ^ Greig, Jonathan. "After Log4j, White House fears the next big open source vulnerability". ZDNet. Retrieved January 16, 2022.
- ^ a b T. Jesper Jacobsson; Adam Hultqvist; Alberto García-Fernández; et al. (December 13, 2021). "An open-access database and analysis tool for perovskite solar cells based on the FAIR data principles". Nature Energy. 7: 107–115. doi:10.1038/s41560-021-00941-3. ISSN 2058-7546. S2CID 245175279.
- ^ "Jesperkemist/perovskitedatabase". GitHub. January 24, 2022. Retrieved January 24, 2022.
- ^ "The Wikipedia of perovskite solar cell research". Helmholtz Association of German Research Centres. Retrieved January 19, 2022.
- ^ "Maui Shell is a Beautiful Vision for the Future of Linux". OMG! Ubuntu!. December 27, 2021. Retrieved January 24, 2022.
- ^ Crume, Jacob (December 30, 2021). "Maui Shell is Here, Ushering in a New Era of Desktop Linux". It's FOSS – News. Retrieved January 16, 2022.
- ^ Wallen, Jack. "Is Maui Shell the future of the Linux desktop?". TechRepublic. Retrieved January 24, 2022.
- ^ Nestor, Marius (December 26, 2021). "Meet Maui Shell, a Convergent Desktop Shell for Linux Desktops and Mobile Devices". 9to5Linux. Retrieved January 24, 2022.
- ^ Higuita, Camilo (December 26, 2021). "Introducing Maui Shell". Nitrux. Retrieved January 16, 2022.
- ^ Khamsi, Roxanne (May 1, 2020). "Coronavirus in context: Scite.ai tracks positive and negative citations for COVID-19 literature". Nature. doi:10.1038/d41586-020-01324-6. Retrieved September 3, 2022.
- ^ Nicholson, Josh M.; Mordaunt, Milo; Lopez, Patrice; Uppala, Ashish; Rosati, Domenic; Rodrigues, Neves P.; Grabitz, Peter; Rife, Sean C. (November 5, 2021). "scite: A smart citation index that displays the context of citations and classifies their intent using deep learning". Quantitative Science Studies. 2 (3): 882–898. doi:10.1162/qss_a_00146.
- ^ "AMD Ryzen Threadripper 3990X is a ridiculous 64-core CPU – and it's coming February 7". Techradar. January 6, 2020. Archived from the original on July 9, 2020. Retrieved July 7, 2020.
- ^ "Folding@Home Crushes Exascale Barrier, Now Faster Than Dozens of Supercomputers – ExtremeTech". www.extremetech.com. Archived from the original on April 17, 2020. Retrieved May 13, 2020.
- ^ "Folding@home crowdsourced computing project passes 1 million downloads amid coronavirus research". VentureBeat. March 31, 2020. Archived from the original on April 17, 2020. Retrieved May 13, 2020.
- ^ "The coronavirus pandemic turned Folding@Home into an exaFLOP supercomputer". Ars Technica. April 14, 2020. Archived from the original on April 23, 2020. Retrieved May 13, 2020.
- ^ Tung, Liam. "CERN throws 10,000 CPU cores at Folding@home coronavirus simulation project". ZDNet. Archived from the original on November 1, 2020. Retrieved May 13, 2020.
- ^ "Scientists create tiny devices that work like the human brain". The Independent. April 20, 2020. Archived from the original on April 24, 2020. Retrieved May 17, 2020.
- ^ "Researchers unveil electronics that mimic the human brain in efficient learning". phys.org. Archived from the original on May 28, 2020. Retrieved May 17, 2020.
- ^ Fu, Tianda; Liu, Xiaomeng; Gao, Hongyan; Ward, Joy E.; Liu, Xiaorong; Yin, Bing; Wang, Zhongrui; Zhuo, Ye; Walker, David J. F.; Joshua Yang, J.; Chen, Jianhan; Lovley, Derek R.; Yao, Jun (April 20, 2020). "Bioinspired bio-voltage memristors". Nature Communications. 11 (1): 1861. Bibcode:2020NatCo..11.1861F. doi:10.1038/s41467-020-15759-y. PMC 7171104. PMID 32313096.
- ^ Staff (May 22, 2020). "Australian researchers record world's fastest internet speed from a single optical chip". Monash University. Archived from the original on May 23, 2020. Retrieved May 24, 2020.
- ^ Monash University (May 22, 2020). "Australian researchers record world's fastest internet speed from a single optical chip". EurekAlert!. Archived from the original on May 25, 2020. Retrieved May 28, 2020.
- ^ Corcoran, Bill; Tan, Mengxi; Xu, Xingyuan; Boes, Andreas; Wu, Jiayang; Nguyen, Thach G.; Chu, Sai T.; Little, Brent E.; Morandotti, Roberto; Mitchell, Arnan; Moss, David J. (May 22, 2020). "Ultra-dense optical data transmission over standard fibre with a single chip source". Nature Communications. 11 (1): 2568. arXiv:2003.11893. Bibcode:2020NatCo..11.2568C. doi:10.1038/s41467-020-16265-x. PMC 7244755. PMID 32444605.
- ^ "Evidence of large groups responding more slowly to crises due to false information". phys.org. Archived from the original on June 13, 2020. Retrieved June 13, 2020.
- ^ Shirado, Hirokazu; Crawford, Forrest W.; Christakis, Nicholas A. (May 27, 2020). "Collective communication and behaviour in response to uncertain 'Danger' in network experiments". Proceedings of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences. 476 (2237): 20190685. Bibcode:2020RSPSA.47690685S. doi:10.1098/rspa.2019.0685. PMC 7277132. PMID 32518501. Fragments of the text were copied from this source, which is available under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License Archived October 16, 2017, at the Wayback Machine.
- ^ "OpenAI API". OpenAI. June 11, 2020.
- ^ Coldewey, Devin (June 11, 2020). "OpenAI makes an all-purpose API for its text-based AI capabilities". TechCrunch. Archived from the original on October 27, 2021. Retrieved July 31, 2020.
If you've ever wanted to try out OpenAI's vaunted machine learning toolset, it just got a lot easier. The company has released an API that lets developers call its AI tools in on "virtually any English language task."
- ^ "New video format 'halves data use of 4K and 8K TVs'". BBC News. July 7, 2020. Archived from the original on July 7, 2020. Retrieved July 9, 2020.
- ^ "Fraunhofer Heinrich Hertz Institute HHI". newsletter.fraunhofer.de. Archived from the original on July 8, 2020. Retrieved August 17, 2020.
- ^ Keene, Scott T.; Lubrano, Claudia; Kazemzadeh, Setareh; Melianas, Armantas; Tuchman, Yaakov; Polino, Giuseppina; Scognamiglio, Paola; Cinà, Lucio; Salleo, Alberto; van de Burgt, Yoeri; Santoro, Francesca (September 2020). "A biohybrid synapse with neurotransmitter-mediated plasticity". Nature Materials. 19 (9): 969–973. Bibcode:2020NatMa..19..969K. doi:10.1038/s41563-020-0703-y. ISSN 1476-4660. PMID 32541935. S2CID 219691307.
- University press release: "Researchers develop artificial synapse that works with living cells". Stanford University via medicalxpress.com. Retrieved September 23, 2022.
- ^ "Beetles carrying tiny backpack cameras stream footage to a smartphone". New Scientist. Retrieved September 7, 2022.
- ^ Iyer, Vikram; Najafi, Ali; James, Johannes; Fuller, Sawyer; Gollakota, Shyamnath (July 15, 2020). "Wireless steerable vision for live insects and insect-scale robots". Science Robotics. 5 (44): eabb0839. doi:10.1126/scirobotics.abb0839. ISSN 2470-9476. PMID 33022605. S2CID 220688078.
- ^ "Neuralink: Elon Musk unveils pig with chip in its brain". BBC News. August 29, 2020. Archived from the original on August 29, 2020. Retrieved August 29, 2020.
- ^ "Elon Musk trots out pigs in demo of Neuralink brain implants". The Verge. August 28, 2020. Archived from the original on August 29, 2020. Retrieved August 29, 2020.
- ^ Brainard, Jeffrey (September 8, 2020). "Dozens of scientific journals have vanished from the internet, and no one preserved them". Science | AAAS. Archived from the original on October 15, 2020. Retrieved October 11, 2020.
- ^ Kwon, Diana (September 10, 2020). "More than 100 scientific journals have disappeared from the Internet". Nature. doi:10.1038/d41586-020-02610-z. Archived from the original on October 3, 2020. Retrieved October 11, 2020.
- ^ Laakso, Mikael; Matthias, Lisa; Jahn, Najko (2021). "Open is not forever: A study of vanished open access journals". Journal of the Association for Information Science and Technology. 72 (9): 1099–1112. arXiv:2008.11933. doi:10.1002/ASI.24460. S2CID 221340749.
- ^ "Prosecutors open homicide case after hacker attack on German hospital". Reuters. September 18, 2020. Archived from the original on October 3, 2020. Retrieved October 9, 2020.
- ^ Starr, Michelle (October 3, 2020). "A New Chemical 'Tree of The Origins of Life' Reveals Our Possible Molecular Evolution". ScienceAlert. Archived from the original on October 6, 2020. Retrieved October 3, 2020.
- ^ Wolos, Agnieszka; et al. (September 25, 2020). "Synthetic connectivity, emergence, and self-regeneration in the network of prebiotic chemistry". Science. 369 (6511): eaaw1955. doi:10.1126/science.aaw1955. PMID 32973002. S2CID 221882090. Archived from the original on October 4, 2020. Retrieved October 3, 2020.
- ^ "The Past, Present and Future of Robotic Surgery". Smithsonian Magazine. Retrieved September 23, 2022.
- ^ Attanasio, Aleks; Scaglioni, Bruno; De Momi, Elena; Fiorini, Paolo; Valdastri, Pietro (May 3, 2021). "Autonomy in Surgical Robotics". Annual Review of Control, Robotics, and Autonomous Systems. 4 (1): 651–679. doi:10.1146/annurev-control-062420-090543. hdl:11311/1168387. ISSN 2573-5144. S2CID 228881423.
- ^ a b c "Free Software Awards winners announced: CiviCRM, Bradley Kuhn, and Alyssa Rosenzweig — Free Software Foundation — Working together for free software". www.fsf.org. Retrieved March 22, 2021.
- ^ a b c Bantle, Ulrich (March 22, 2021). "Free Software Awards vergeben". Linux-Magazin (in German). Retrieved September 6, 2022.
- ^ a b c Free Software Awards winners announced: SecuRepairs, Protesilaos Stavrou, Paul Eggert , FSF
- ^ a b c Bantle, Ulrich (March 22, 2022). "Free Software Awards 2021 vergeben". Linux-Magazin (in German). Retrieved September 6, 2022.
- ^ a b c "Free Software Foundation award winners". SD Times. March 21, 2022. Retrieved September 6, 2022.
- ^ Speed, Richard. "Asahi Linux progress in graphics drivers on Apple's M1". www.theregister.com. Retrieved September 6, 2022.
- ^ Noble, Holcomb B.; Hafner, Katie (March 24, 2023). "Gordon E. Moore, Intel Co-Founder Behind Moore's Law, Dies at 94". The New York Times. Archived from the original on July 16, 2023. Retrieved August 2, 2023.
- ^ Tosh-Morelli, Vicky (January 21, 2022). "In Memoriam: Hagit Shatkay-Reshef".
- ^ "[GDNET] Takao Nishizeki". list.dia.uniroma3.it.
- ^ "Lorinda Cherry RIP [LWN.net]". lwn.net.
- ^ Claburn, Thomas. "Obit: Mary Coombs, first woman commercial programmer". www.theregister.com.
- ^ Cohn, Cindy (September 5, 2022). "Honoring Peter Eckersley, Who Made the Internet a Safer Place for Everyone". Electronic Frontier Foundation.
- ^ O’Neil, Mathieu; Muselli, Laure; Raissi, Mahin; Zacchiroli, Stefano (May 2021). "'Open source has won and lost the war': Legitimising commercial–communal hybridisation in a FOSS project" (PDF). New Media & Society. 23 (5): 1157–1180. doi:10.1177/1461444820907022. ISSN 1461-4448. S2CID 216386568.