A pose-mapping technique could remotely evaluate patients with cerebral palsy
The machine-learning method works on most mobile devices and could be expanded to assess other motor disorders outside of the doctor’s office.
The machine-learning method works on most mobile devices and could be expanded to assess other motor disorders outside of the doctor’s office.
Researchers use synthetic data to improve a model’s ability to grasp conceptual information, which could enhance automatic captioning and question-answering systems.
The system could improve image quality in video streaming or help autonomous vehicles identify road hazards in real-time.
The challenge involves more than just a blurry JPEG. Fixing motion artifacts in medical imaging requires a more sophisticated approach.
“PhotoGuard,” developed by MIT CSAIL researchers, prevents unauthorized image manipulation, safeguarding authenticity in the era of advanced generative models.
The dataset, being collected as part of a US Coast Guard science mission, will be released open source to help advance naval mission planning and climate change studies.
Training artificial neural networks with data from real brains can make computer vision more robust.
MAGE merges the two key tasks of image generation and recognition, typically trained separately, into a single system.
MIT Environmental Solutions Initiative Research Program Director Marcela Angel MCP ’18 has built an international program in natural climate solutions.
This machine-learning method could assist with robotic scene understanding, image editing, or online recommendation systems.
A new computer vision system turns any shiny object into a camera of sorts, enabling an observer to see around corners or beyond obstructions.
Researchers identify a property that helps computer vision models learn to represent the visual world in a more stable, predictable way.
A new method could provide detailed information about internal structures, voids, and cracks, based solely on data about exterior conditions.
The technology of MIT alumni-founded Hosta a.i. creates detailed property assessments from photos.
By keeping data fresh, the system could help robots inspect buildings or search disaster zones.