Two mathematicians have proved that a straightforward question—how hard is it to untie a knot?—has a complicated answer.
Imagine you're watching a movie, in which a character puts a chocolate bar in a box, closes the box and leaves the room. Another person, also in the room, moves the bar from a box to a desk drawer.
Researchers showed that large language models use a small, specialized subset of parameters to perform Theory-of-Mind reasoning, despite activating their full network for every task.
Data science has become one of the most rewarding and future-driven careers in the US, offering an average annual salary ...
The safety tests that the government says will no longer use animals by the end of this year include the practice of giving ...
Imagine you're watching a movie, in which a character puts a chocolate bar in a box, closes the box and leaves the ...
New research from UBC Okanagan mathematically demonstrates that the universe cannot be simulated. Using Gödel’s ...
Coding with large language models (LLMs) holds huge promise, but it also exposes some long-standing flaws in software: code ...
Universities are using blockchain to secure data, fund research, and streamline administration through crypto innovation.
The math behind even the simplest ocean waves is notoriously uncooperative. A team of Italian mathematicians has made major ...
In a landmark study released today, artificial intelligence (AI) has been used to reveal over a thousand previously hidden ...
This combination of consistent, high-fidelity performance with all-to-all connectivity has led many key demonstrations of ...