1/2/2026
1/2/2026 – Recent AI News
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MIT in the media: 2025 in review
Published: Mon, 22 Dec 2025 17:20:00 -0500 | (Link)
MIT community members made headlines with key research advances and their efforts to tackle pressing challenges. -
Guided learning lets “untrainable” neural networks realize their potential
Published: Thu, 18 Dec 2025 16:20:00 -0500 | (Link)
CSAIL researchers find even “untrainable” neural nets can learn effectively when guided by another network’s built-in biases using their guidance method. -
A new way to increase the capabilities of large language models
Published: Wed, 17 Dec 2025 23:10:00 -0500 | (Link)
MIT-IBM Watson AI Lab researchers developed an expressive architecture that provides better state tracking and sequential reasoning in LLMs over long texts. -
A “scientific sandbox” lets researchers explore the evolution of vision systems
Published: Wed, 17 Dec 2025 14:00:00 -0500 | (Link)
The AI-powered tool could inform the design of better sensors and cameras for robots or autonomous vehicles. -
“Robot, make me a chair”
Published: Tue, 16 Dec 2025 00:00:00 -0500 | (Link)
An AI-driven system lets users design and build simple, multicomponent objects by describing them with words. -
This tiny chip could change the future of quantum computing
Published: Fri, 26 Dec 2025 10:38:10 EST | (Link)
A new microchip-sized device could dramatically accelerate the future of quantum computing. It controls laser frequencies with extreme precision while using far less power than today’s bulky systems. Crucially, it’s made with standard chip manufacturing, meaning it can be mass-produced instead of custom-built. This opens the door to quantum machines far larger and more powerful than anything possible today. -
This AI finds simple rules where humans see only chaos
Published: Mon, 22 Dec 2025 01:04:50 EST | (Link)
A new AI developed at Duke University can uncover simple, readable rules behind extremely complex systems. It studies how systems evolve over time and reduces thousands of variables into compact equations that still capture real behavior. The method works across physics, engineering, climate science, and biology. Researchers say it could help scientists understand systems where traditional equations are missing or too complicated to write down. -
What if AI becomes conscious and we never know
Published: Wed, 31 Dec 2025 21:23:42 EST | (Link)
A philosopher at the University of Cambridge says there’s no reliable way to know whether AI is conscious—and that may remain true for the foreseeable future. According to Dr. Tom McClelland, consciousness alone isn’t the ethical tipping point anyway; sentience, the capacity to feel good or bad, is what truly matters. He argues that claims of conscious AI are often more marketing than science, and that believing in machine minds too easily could cause real harm. The safest stance for now, he says, is honest uncertainty. -
A new tool is revealing the invisible networks inside cancer
Published: Sun, 21 Dec 2025 07:29:28 EST | (Link)
Spanish researchers have created a powerful new open-source tool that helps uncover the hidden genetic networks driving cancer. Called RNACOREX, the software can analyze thousands of molecular interactions at once, revealing how genes communicate inside tumors and how those signals relate to patient survival. Tested across 13 different cancer types using international data, the tool matches the predictive power of advanced AI systems—while offering something rare in modern analytics: clear, interpretable explanations that help scientists understand why tumors behave the way they do.