If art is how we express our humanity, where does AI fit in?
MIT postdoc Ziv Epstein SM ’19, PhD ’23 discusses issues arising from the use of generative AI to make art and other media.
MIT postdoc Ziv Epstein SM ’19, PhD ’23 discusses issues arising from the use of generative AI to make art and other media.
The inaugural SERC Symposium convened experts from multiple disciplines to explore the challenges and opportunities that arise with the broad applicability of computing in many aspects of society.
The scientists used a natural language-based logical inference dataset to create smaller language models that outperformed much larger counterparts.
A new multimodal technique blends major self-supervised learning methods to learn more similarly to humans.
Cindy Alejandra Heredia’s journey from Laredo, Texas, took her to leading the MIT autonomous vehicle team and to an MBA from MIT Sloan.
Researchers develop an algorithm that decides when a “student” machine should follow its teacher, and when it should learn on its own.
It’s more important than ever for artificial intelligence to estimate how accurately it is explaining data.
Researchers create a new simulation tool for robots to manipulate complex fluids in a step toward helping them more effortlessly assist with daily tasks.
By mapping the volumes of objects, rather than their surfaces, a new technique could yield solutions to computer graphics problems in animation and CAD.
Senior Ananya Gurumurthy adds her musical talents to her math and computer science studies to advocate using data for social change.
With the artificial intelligence conversation now mainstream, the 2023 MIT-MGB AI Cures conference saw attendance double from previous years.
A new machine-learning model makes more accurate predictions about ocean currents, which could help with tracking plastic pollution and oil spills, and aid in search and rescue.
The CSAIL scientist describes natural language processing research through state-of-the-art machine-learning models and investigation of how language can enhance other types of artificial intelligence.
Models trained using common data-collection techniques judge rule violations more harshly than humans would, researchers report.
Researchers identify a property that helps computer vision models learn to represent the visual world in a more stable, predictable way.