Artificialis weekly - Issue #7
Sep 23, 2021 4:01 pm
Hey , I hope you're having a good day so far!
Here's what you might have missed this week.
We're very close to the next big update of our community, stay tuned!
Make also sure to join us tomorrow for the Friday Trivia Night, win a unique role, chance to win nitro, and more!
Here's some of our latest blogs:
- How to extract text from any image with Deep Learning, by Alessandro
- 12 months into my Data Science journey, by Alessandro
- The issue with too much variety, by Max
- Neural Networks 101 - Part 2, by Ashik
- Faster Image Classification using Tensorflow’s Graph mode, by Rohit
Here's the list of the best papers I shared this week!
- Panoptic Narrative Grounding to densely segment text and visual objects
- Novel method that outperforms single-image GAN video generators
- Google AI breaks the wall of 90% top-1 accuracy on ImageNet mixing convolutions and transformers
Recent news in the world of Artificial Intelligence
Deep learning helps predict new drug combinations to fight COVID-19
The existential threat of COVID-19 has highlighted an acute need to develop working therapeutics against emerging health threats. One of the luxuries deep learning has afforded us is the ability to modify the landscape as it unfolds -- so long as we can keep up with the viral threat, and access the right data.
US military tests AI software that could let it predict events ‘days in advance’
The US military is conducting tests involving artificial intelligence, cloud computing, and sensors, that could give it the ability to predict events “days in advance”.
The system, called Global Information Dominance Experiments (GIDE), has been tested in three times according to General Glen VanHerck
Artificial intelligence is taking over real estate – here’s what that means for homebuyers
Algorithms can now go through millions of documents in seconds, looking through property values, debt levels, home renovations, and even some of a homeowner’s personal information.
The traditional agent would go knock on the doors of a lot of homes. Now AI helps you find the homes that are most likely to sell in the next 12 months,” said Compass’ chief technology officer.
The software scans students' web searches, emails, and chats for certain keywords that suggest bullying, self-harm, violence, and other issues.
The agency cites concerns about possible privacy infringement, unfair disciplinary action, and increased monitoring at higher-poverty school districts.
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See you next week, have a great day!
Alessandro
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