9/19/2025
9/19/2025 – Recent AI News
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What does the future hold for generative AI?
Published: Fri, 19 Sep 2025 00:00:00 -0400 | (Link)
At the inaugural MIT Generative AI Impact Consortium Symposium, researchers and business leaders discussed potential advancements centered on this powerful technology. -
How to build AI scaling laws for efficient LLM training and budget maximization
Published: Tue, 16 Sep 2025 11:00:00 -0400 | (Link)
MIT-IBM Watson AI Lab researchers have developed a universal guide for estimating how large language models will perform based on smaller models in the same family. -
Machine-learning tool gives doctors a more detailed 3D picture of fetal health
Published: Mon, 15 Sep 2025 10:00:00 -0400 | (Link)
MIT CSAIL researchers developed a tool that can model the shape and movements of fetuses in 3D, potentially assisting doctors in finding abnormalities and making diagnoses. -
DOE selects MIT to establish a Center for the Exascale Simulation of Coupled High-Enthalpy Fluid–Solid Interactions
Published: Wed, 10 Sep 2025 11:45:00 -0400 | (Link)
The research center, sponsored by the DOE’s National Nuclear Security Administration, will advance the simulation of extreme environments, such as those in hypersonic flight and atmospheric reentry. -
AI and machine learning for engineering design
Published: Sun, 07 Sep 2025 00:00:00 -0400 | (Link)
Popular mechanical engineering course applies machine learning and AI theory to real-world engineering design. -
AI has no idea what it’s doing, but it’s threatening us all
Published: Sun, 07 Sep 2025 21:23:41 EDT | (Link)
Artificial intelligence is reshaping law, ethics, and society at a speed that threatens fundamental human dignity. Dr. Maria Randazzo of Charles Darwin University warns that current regulation fails to protect rights such as privacy, autonomy, and anti-discrimination. The “black box problem” leaves people unable to trace or challenge AI decisions that may harm them. -
Caltech breakthrough makes quantum memory last 30 times longer
Published: Wed, 27 Aug 2025 23:49:15 EDT | (Link)
While superconducting qubits are great at fast calculations, they struggle to store information for long periods. A team at Caltech has now developed a clever solution: converting quantum information into sound waves. By using a tiny device that acts like a miniature tuning fork, the researchers were able to extend quantum memory lifetimes up to 30 times longer than before. This breakthrough could pave the way toward practical, scalable quantum computers that can both compute and remember. -
Why tiny bee brains could hold the key to smarter AI
Published: Sun, 24 Aug 2025 03:15:28 EDT | (Link)
Researchers discovered that bees use flight movements to sharpen brain signals, enabling them to recognize patterns with remarkable accuracy. A digital model of their brain shows that this movement-based perception could revolutionize AI and robotics by emphasizing efficiency over massive computing power. -
Scientists just cracked the quantum code hidden in a single atom
Published: Fri, 22 Aug 2025 03:35:14 EDT | (Link)
A research team has created a quantum logic gate that uses fewer qubits by encoding them with the powerful GKP error-correction code. By entangling quantum vibrations inside a single atom, they achieved a milestone that could transform how quantum computers scale.