10/24/2025
10/24/2025 – Recent AI News
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The brain power behind sustainable AI
Published: Fri, 24 Oct 2025 00:00:00 -0400 | (Link)
PhD student Miranda Schwacke explores how computing inspired by the human brain can fuel energy-efficient artificial intelligence. -
Five with MIT ties elected to National Academy of Medicine for 2025
Published: Wed, 22 Oct 2025 15:25:00 -0400 | (Link)
Professors Facundo Batista and Dina Katabi, along with three additional MIT alumni, are honored for their outstanding professional achievement and commitment to service. -
Creating AI that matters
Published: Tue, 21 Oct 2025 16:10:00 -0400 | (Link)
How the MIT-IBM Watson AI Lab is shaping AI-sociotechnical systems for the future. -
New software designs eco-friendly clothing that can reassemble into new items
Published: Fri, 17 Oct 2025 14:30:00 -0400 | (Link)
To reduce waste, the Refashion program helps users create outlines for adaptable clothing, such as pants that can be reconfigured into a dress. Each component of these pieces can be replaced, rearranged, or restyled. -
Method teaches generative AI models to locate personalized objects
Published: Thu, 16 Oct 2025 00:00:00 -0400 | (Link)
After being trained with this technique, vision-language models can better identify a unique item in a new scene. -
Stanford’s tiny eye chip helps the blind see again
Published: Wed, 22 Oct 2025 10:26:46 EDT | (Link)
A wireless eye implant developed at Stanford Medicine has restored reading ability to people with advanced macular degeneration. The PRIMA chip works with smart glasses to replace lost photoreceptors using infrared light. Most trial participants regained functional vision, reading books and recognizing signs. Researchers are now developing higher-resolution versions that could eventually provide near-normal sight. -
AI turns x-rays into time machines for arthritis care
Published: Wed, 22 Oct 2025 09:57:35 EDT | (Link)
Researchers at the University of Surrey developed an AI that predicts what a person’s knee X-ray will look like in a year, helping track osteoarthritis progression. The tool provides both a visual forecast and a risk score, offering doctors and patients a clearer understanding of the disease. Faster and more interpretable than earlier systems, it could soon expand to predict other conditions like lung or heart disease. -
Scientists build artificial neurons that work like real ones
Published: Tue, 14 Oct 2025 01:31:23 EDT | (Link)
UMass Amherst engineers have built an artificial neuron powered by bacterial protein nanowires that functions like a real one, but at extremely low voltage. This allows for seamless communication with biological cells and drastically improved energy efficiency. The discovery could lead to bio-inspired computers and wearable electronics that no longer need power-hungry amplifiers. Future applications may include sensors powered by sweat or devices that harvest electricity from thin air. -
90% of science is lost. This new AI just found it
Published: Mon, 13 Oct 2025 08:46:51 EDT | (Link)
Vast amounts of valuable research data remain unused, trapped in labs or lost to time. Frontiers aims to change that with FAIR² Data Management, a groundbreaking AI-driven system that makes datasets reusable, verifiable, and citable. By uniting curation, compliance, peer review, and interactive visualization in one platform, FAIR² empowers scientists to share their work responsibly and gain recognition.