Hey Alexa! Sorry I fooled you ...
MIT’s new system TextFooler can trick the types of natural-language-processing systems that Google uses to help power its search results, including audio for Google Home.
MIT’s new system TextFooler can trick the types of natural-language-processing systems that Google uses to help power its search results, including audio for Google Home.
Starting with higher-value niche markets and then expanding could help perovskite-based solar panels become competitive with silicon.
With the initial organizational structure in place, the MIT Schwarzman College of Computing moves forward with implementation.
Doctoral candidate Natalie Lao wants to show that anyone can learn to use AI to make a better world.
Device developed within the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering has the potential to replace damaged organs with lab-grown ones.
Computer scientists’ new method could help doctors avoid ineffective or unnecessarily risky treatments.
Model tags road features based on satellite images, to improve GPS navigation in places with limited map data.
A new method determines whether circuits are accurately executing complex operations that classical computers can’t tackle.
MIT researchers and collaborators have developed an open-source curriculum to teach young students about ethics and artificial intelligence.
As natural language processing techniques improve, suggestions are getting speedier and more relevant.
Study: After eBay improved its translation software, international commerce increased sharply.
With its centerpiece exhibit for the forthcoming Universal Hip Hop Museum, an MIT team uses artificial intelligence to explore the rich history of hip hop music.
Stimuli that sound or look like gibberish to humans are indistinguishable from naturalistic stimuli to deep networks.
A novel experimental facility integrates automation and active learning, illuminating a path to accelerated scientific discovery.
The Institute's largest academic department reorganizes with new leadership as part of the formation of the MIT Schwarzman College of Computing.