• Mikhail Dyakonov, a theoretical physicist at the University of Montpellier in France, believes engineers will never be able to control all the continuous parameters that would underpin even a 1,000-qubit quantum computer. (scientificamerican.com)
  • So people realized we needed an approach that adapts to the constraints of the hardware we have-an optimization problem," said Patrick Coles, a theoretical physicist developing algorithms at Los Alamos and the senior lead author of the paper. (scitechdaily.com)
  • Here Lawrence M. Krauss, himself a theoretical physicist and best-selling author, offers a unique scientific biography: a rollicking narrative coupled with clear and novel expositions of science at the limits. (blogspot.com)
  • More than 70 years ago, Soviet physicists Leonid Mandelstam and Igor Tamm deduced theoretically this minimum time for transforming the wave function. (latamisrael.com)
  • Lev Andreevich Artsimovich was a Soviet physicist who provided the basis of the Tokamak , a device capable of confining ultra-high temperature plasma suitable for research into controlled nuclear fusion. (todayinsci.com)
  • Their unprecedented experiment, which was originated by famous Soviet physicist Anastas Korzh, entails measurement of the Universe's expansion. (pravda.ru)
  • It's a challenging problem," explained Auralee Edelen, now a research associate at the SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory, who in part inspired Nord thanks to her work applying machine learning to controlling particle accelerators. (gizmodo.com)
  • Physicists hope that the technique of laser plasma acceleration will lead to a new generation of powerful and compact particle accelerators offering unique properties for a wide range of applications. (phys.org)
  • Since discoveries in particle physics rely on statistics, the greater the number of collisions, the more chances physicists have to see a particle or process that they have not seen before. (sciencebusiness.net)
  • Meanwhile it must have dawned on particle physicists that the non-discovery of fundamentally new particles besides the Higgs is a problem for their field, and especially for the prospects of financing that bigger collider which they want. (uncommondescent.com)
  • Edge ( www.edge.org ) features a cross section of elite scientists, including evolutionary biologist Richard Dawkins, parallel computing pioneer Danny Hillis, language theorist and cognitive scientist Stephen Pinker, robotics expert Rodney Brook, chaos theory expert Doyne Farmer, and physicists Paul Davies, Freeman Dyson and Lee Smolin. (edge.org)
  • Bernard J. Eastlund (1938 - December 12, 2007) was an American physicist who received his B.S. in physics from Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and his Ph.D. in physics from Columbia University. (wikipedia.org)
  • Upon retirement, White was made an honorary fellow of the CSIRO Division of Materials Science and Engineering (formally the Division of Telecommunications and Industrial Physics) (1990 - 2008). (science.org.au)
  • The fact is, Tesla was also a physicist who studied in college such courses as analytic geometry, experimental physics and higher mathematics. (newdawnmagazine.com)
  • Recently, physicist Dan Boyer of the U.S. Department of Energy's (DOE) Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory (PPPL) used this technology to design quick and precise forecasts for progressing control of experiments in the National Spherical Torus Experiment-Upgrade (NSTX-U) - the flagship fusion facility at PPPL that is under repair at present. (azorobotics.com)
  • the 2001 Kelvin Medal from the UK Institute of Physics and the 2002 Michael Faraday Prize from the Royal Society for promoting science to the public. (edge.org)
  • The sciences are becoming more important, especially biology and physics. (edge.org)
  • Is physics used in machine learning? (physics-network.org)
  • Since its beginning, machine learning has been inspired by methods from statistical physics. (physics-network.org)
  • Physics-informed machine learning allows scientists to use this prior knowledge to help the training of the neural network, making it more efficient. (physics-network.org)
  • AI, especially its subfield of Machine Learning (ML), has already been successfully applied to condensed matter and material physics by providing a robust platform for encoding materials systems from experimental and computational data into a latent space of features. (physics-network.org)
  • DeepXDE is a library for scientific machine learning and physics-informed learning. (physics-network.org)
  • it combines computer science, physics and applied mathematics to develop scientific solutions to complex problems. (physics-network.org)
  • How is physics used in data science? (physics-network.org)
  • His research, which is conducted under the guidance of Margaret Cheung, professor of physics in the College of Natural Sciences and Mathematics, blends his interest in biomedical research with his training as a physicist. (uh.edu)
  • Goldschmidt's determinations of the abundances of the elements, especially those with the "magic numbers" of neutrons, led to the systematic study of his results by physicists and chemists and ultimately to two Nobel Prizes far theories of the origin of the elements based on nuclear physics. (balzan.org)
  • Physics is a fundamental science that deals with the study of matter, energy, and interactions between them. (physics-network.org)
  • In order to fully grasp the fundamentals of P in physics, it's important to explore the various factors that affect momentum, like mass and velocity. (physics-network.org)
  • Physics is a branch of science that deals with exploring how the universe works. (physics-network.org)
  • This paper argues that Winnicott disagrees with the naturalistic imperative, which reduces the real to what is objective and places physics as a model for the sciences. (bvsalud.org)
  • Winnicott's remarks on human phenomena do not echo the imperatives of modern philosophy of reducing all that is real to that which is objectifiable and of setting physics as a paradigm for all of science. (bvsalud.org)
  • It is therefore important to have fundamental knowledge in calculus as this would enable a data science practitioner to have some understanding of the optimization algorithms used in data science and machine learning. (kdnuggets.com)
  • It will therefore provide more accurate measurements of fundamental particles and enable physicists to observe rare processes that occur below the current sensitivity level of the LHC. (sciencebusiness.net)
  • On the mysterious: It is the fundamental emotion which stands at the cradle of true art and true science. (wisdomquotes.com)
  • Are the social sciences challenging because of fundamental difficulties or because of imposed ones? (lesswrong.com)
  • A new landmark calculation executed by an international team of physicists employed unparalleled experimental results and advanced supercomputers to reveal more about just how and why some fundamental symmetry breaks. (scienceblogs.com)
  • Since the 1960s, physicists have determined that the fundamental physical laws and parameters of our universe are finely tuned, against all odds, to make our universe capable of hosting life. (stephencmeyer.org)
  • The algorithms are called variational because the optimization process varies the algorithm on the fly, as a kind of machine learning. (scitechdaily.com)
  • a computational machine whose inner workings are governed by the laws of quantum mechanics. (wonderfest.org)
  • For example, to factor a 300 digit number on a 1-THz quantum computer would take approximately 1 second. (wonderfest.org)
  • UC Berkeley physicist Norman Yao will present a broad overview of current efforts toward building a quantum computer. (wonderfest.org)
  • Issued by The National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine , the report prescribes a healthy dose of skepticism for the quantum-computing fever that has infected tech news headlines and press releases in recent years. (scientificamerican.com)
  • Those problems include simulations for material science and quantum chemistry, factoring numbers, big-data analysis, and virtually every application that has been proposed for quantum computers. (scitechdaily.com)
  • Which factors determine the speed limit for quantum computations? (latamisrael.com)
  • Which factors determine how fast a quantum computer can perform its calculations? (latamisrael.com)
  • Quantum computers are highly sophisticated machines that rely on the principles of quantum mechanics to process information. (latamisrael.com)
  • Physicists at the University of Bonn and the Technion have now investigated this Mandelstam-Tamm limit for the first time with an experiment on a complex quantum system. (latamisrael.com)
  • Perhaps the greatest physicist of the second half of the twentieth century, Richard Feynman changed the way we think about quantum mechanics, the most perplexing of all physical theories. (blogspot.com)
  • The fusion of quantum computing and machine learning has become a booming research area. (vectorsec.eu)
  • But even today's rudimentary quantum processors are uncannily matched to the needs of machine learning. (vectorsec.eu)
  • There is a natural combination between the intrinsic statistical nature of quantum computing … and machine learning," said Johannes Otterbach , a physicist at Rigetti Computing, a quantum-computer company in Berkeley, California. (vectorsec.eu)
  • Google, Microsoft, IBM and other tech giants are pouring money into quantum machine learning, and a startup incubator at the University of Toronto is devoted to it. (vectorsec.eu)
  • Machine learning' is becoming a buzzword," said Jacob Biamonte , a quantum physicist at the Skolkovo Institute of Science and Technology in Moscow. (vectorsec.eu)
  • Although you might think a quantum machine-learning system should be powerful, it suffers from a kind of locked-in syndrome. (vectorsec.eu)
  • Harold Urey's equally seminal contribution was his classic paper "The thermodynamic properties of isotopic substances", also published in 1947, in which he calculated the equilibrium separation factors for isotopes of the light elements in chemical reactions and solid-liquid-vapor phase equilibria, based on quantum mechanics and spectroscopic data on isotopic molecules. (balzan.org)
  • The talks include: Feynman on Computers, Feynman on Nanotechnology, Feynman on Los Alamos, Lawrence Krauss on Richard Feynman's Life in Science, and Feynman's Dirac Memorial Lecture. (blogspot.com)
  • This is the Physicist Richard Feynman recalling his activities at Los Alamos during the World War II. (blogspot.com)
  • The choice of natural science as the predominant mode of representation of reality entails what Heidegger calls a process of objectification ( Vergegenständlichung ). (bvsalud.org)
  • A machine learning algorithm could be used to generate the optimal experimental setup with which to observe the universe-such as how optical fibers are allocated for observing different wavelengths of light-in order to calculate this dark energy equation of state. (gizmodo.com)
  • and ensuring that the event records produced by them can be manipulated to provide data which may be compared to that from existing experiments is a task ill-suited to experimental physicists under pressure to produce plots for one specific process. (lu.se)
  • In Saint-Paul-lés-Durance, a tiny village in southern France, construction of the core element of the nuclear fusion reactor ITER has just started - the machine that is meant to bring the long-sought breakthrough in fusion technology. (cscs.ch)
  • Boyer is the author of a paper in Nuclear Fusion that explains machine learning tactics. (azorobotics.com)
  • Generally, no one gets upset about which conclusions nuclear physicists arrive at, but they complain on Twitter when new research is posted on sexual orientation . (lesswrong.com)
  • It looks like the country of Germany has taken a huge step forward - with their gargantuan nuclear fusion machine producing its first ever hydrogen plasma. (ubergizmo.com)
  • Having turned on the Wendelstein 7-X (W7X) stellarator, which so happens to be the biggest nuclear fusion machine at the moment in the country, it managed to produce as well as to sustain hydrogen plasma in its maiden attempt. (ubergizmo.com)
  • The big deal about this development is because producing hydrogen plasma is the main factor in taking advantage of the limitless energy of nuclear fusion in a clean manner. (ubergizmo.com)
  • Of course, many obstacles are still in the way where controlled nuclear fusion are concerned, including managing a machine that can produce as well as manipulate a 100-million-degree-Celsius (180 million degrees Fahrenheit) ball of plasma gas. (ubergizmo.com)
  • Read more about Nuclear and Science . (ubergizmo.com)
  • Data science is a very quantitative field that requires advanced mathematics. (kdnuggets.com)
  • That experience gave me lots of ideas for why our teaching of many subjects, especially science and mathematics, is so unsuccessful-and for how we can improve our learning. (freakonomics.com)
  • However, another idea which Tesla discussed was abandoned by modern physicists, and that was the concept of the all pervasive ether. (newdawnmagazine.com)
  • The machine learning tests performed were able to accurately forecast the density of the electrons and distribution of pressure in fusion plasmas, where both were crucial but hard-to-predict parameters. (azorobotics.com)
  • A physicist in a data science job will spend most of their time analyzing data and designing and developing models to predict how something will behave based on data of how it has behaved in the past. (physics-network.org)
  • To answer this question, Gasic is modeling protein networks in order to predict how factors such as concentration or protein packing shape play a role. (uh.edu)
  • These concepts are necessary for physicists to understand and predict how objects behave in different scenarios, ranging from simple machines to space exploration. (physics-network.org)
  • This study aims to predict the occurrence of postpartum hemorrhage using machine learning models based on antenatal, intrapartum, and postnatal visit data obtained from the Kenya Antenatal and Postnatal Care Research Collective cohort. (cdc.gov)
  • These machines are quite far away," said Mark Horowitz, a professor of electrical engineering and computer science at Stanford University and chair of the committee behind the report, during the press event. (scientificamerican.com)
  • Boyer together with his coauthor Jason Chadwick, an undergraduate student at Carnegie Mellon University and a Science Undergraduate Laboratory Internship (SULI) program participant at PPPL in summer 2020, tested machine learning predictions with the help of a decade's data for NSTX, the forerunner of NSTX-U, as well as 10 weeks of operation of NSTX-U. (azorobotics.com)
  • The laser pulses plow their way through the gas in the form of narrow discs, stripping the electrons from the hydrogen molecules and sweeping them aside like a snow plow," explains Maier, who works at the Centre for Free-Electron Laser Science (CFEL), a joint enterprise between DESY, the University of Hamburg and the Max Planck Society. (phys.org)
  • Such is the conclusion of the article "Fishing Down Marine Food Webs," published last month in Science, the journal of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, by a group including scientists from the University of British Columbia and the International Center for Living Aquatic Resources Management (ICLARM) in the Philippines (1). (seafriends.org.nz)
  • These two fields originated in the laboratories of Alfred O.C. Nier, a physicist at the University of Minnesota, and Harold C. Urey, a physical chemist of the University of Chicago, in the years immediately after the second World War. (balzan.org)
  • Our recent experiments indicate that the newly tested pellet injection technique can be applied at pellet repetition rates approaching what ITER needs and without harmful effects," said Larry Baylor, a plasma physicist and engineer at ORNL's Fusion Energy Division, who led the collaboration of researchers from General Atomics, the ITER Organization, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, and the University of California San Diego. (iter.org)
  • In the early part of this decade, two researchers working independently - Princeton graduate student Hak Poon and Cornell University physicist Harold Craighead - found that the jet was stable for a very short distance after leaving the nozzle, but the result was still not practical and the reasons were still elusive. (analytica-world.com)
  • The dialysis machine has its origins in research at Lund University. (lu.se)
  • Benjamin O. Tayo is a Physicist, Data Science Educator, and Writer, as well as the Owner of DataScienceHub. (kdnuggets.com)
  • Physicist, writer and broadcaster, now based in South. (edge.org)
  • Esteemed science writer John Gribbin states: "If the Universe could have any density at all, why should it just happen, by coincidence, to sit right on the dividing line between being open and being closed-why should it be as big as possible without being infinite? (enlightened-spirituality.org)
  • This post was written by Brookhaven Lab science writer Justin Eure. (scienceblogs.com)
  • Scientists have discovered that we live in a kind of "Goldilocks Universe," or what Australian physicist Luke Barnes calls an extremely "Fortunate Universe. (stephencmeyer.org)
  • To the educated physicist, the capabilities of this machine may seem impossible, maybe even crazy. (altenergy.org)
  • These include digital code in DNA and RNA-tiny, intricately constructed molecular machines which vastly exceed our own digital high technology in their storage and transmission capabilities. (stephencmeyer.org)
  • Physicist-philosopher James Jeans remarked early in the 20th century that the universe looked to him a great deal "more like a great thought than like a great machine. (enlightened-spirituality.org)
  • Moreover, many factors had to be maintained in a perfect balance at various stages over time for the universe to continue its existence. (enlightened-spirituality.org)
  • Even slight alterations of many independent factors-such as the strength of gravitational or electromagnetic attraction, or the initial arrangement of matter and energy in the universe-would have rendered life impossible. (stephencmeyer.org)
  • One reason for this discrepancy could be that the social sciences are fundamentally less tractable. (lesswrong.com)
  • I think one interesting take is that the social sciences aren't fundamentally more difficult than technical fields, but rather that they undergo substantial limitations. (lesswrong.com)
  • That many aspects of the social sciences aren't fundamentally more difficult to understand than technical systems, but rather that progress is deeply bottlenecked by ethical dilemmas and potential dangerous truths. (lesswrong.com)
  • Today, many researchers undoubtedly agree that this is a fundamentally new physical phenomenon, which will trigger new breakthroughs in the world of science. (pravda.ru)
  • I am Neville Fletcher and I am interviewing Guy White for the Australian Academy of Science. (science.org.au)
  • Le plus grand tokamak du monde est en cours de construction à Saint-Paul-lez-Durance (Bouches-du-Rhône). (iter.org)
  • Thanks to 8 million computing hours on the 4,096-processor SuperMUC machine, the researchers were able to simulate the collision of the two Antennae Galaxies and model what's happening inside a cube with edges 600,000 light-years long, down to a resolution of 3 light-years. (nautil.us)
  • Scientific machine learning is a burgeoning discipline which blends scientific computing and machine learning. (physics-network.org)
  • These systems have been made possible by vast computing power, so it was inevitable that tech companies would seek out computers that were not just bigger, but a new class of machine altogether. (vectorsec.eu)
  • Understanding the mechanism behind that cosmic preference remains one of the great puzzles in science, and physicists are closer than ever to tunneling through the looking glass to seek out the answers. (scienceblogs.com)
  • Not surprisingly, many physicists have concluded that this improbable fine-tuning points to a cosmic "fine-tuner. (stephencmeyer.org)
  • ITER Magazine - Français Découvrez ITER au travers de la publication semestrielle de notre magazine en ligne, adaptée à une large audience. (iter.org)
  • The US Domestic Agency (US-ITER) is responsible for developing and fabricating pellet injectors and pellet-based ELM pacing technology for the ITER machine. (iter.org)
  • Some Senegalese researchers are also involved in the African Initiative for Planetary and Space Sciences , which I head up. (lifeboat.com)
  • In the aftermath of the largest offshore oil spill in U.S. history, the Deepwater Horizon accident in April, as oil and gas bubbled out of a ruptured well and into the Gulf of Mexico, UC Santa Barbara researchers mobilized to contribute their expertise to the response effort and to add to our understanding of the complex science of spills. (issuu.com)
  • Musk and physicist Stephen Hawking both joined AI researchers this year in pledging support for principles of AI that would make sure it supports people and doesn't lead to an arms race. (morningconsult.com)
  • Nord was already familiar with using machine learning to classify objects in space, and through conversations with other experts, he realized that machine learning could be a way to optimize the performance of science experiments, including telescopes. (gizmodo.com)
  • If this take is true, then it could change conversations around progress in the social sciences to focus on possibly uncomfortable trade-offs between research progress, experimentation ethics, and long term risks. (lesswrong.com)
  • John Brockman promotes a Third Culture: "The Third Culture is a name for those people who, through empirical work in the natural sciences - as well as in other subjects, such as feminism, architecture, etc. - transform our thinking about who and what we are. (edge.org)
  • But Brockman, whose polemic is directed more towards the narrow mindedness of the lions of intellectual salons than artists, knows this as well, because it was artists like John Cage who made him aware of the natural sciences. (edge.org)
  • In his Zollikon Seminars, Heidegger questions the tribute paid by the sciences of the mind to the logic of the natural sciences, and stresses that Freud, by thinking of the mind as a machine driven by instinctive powers, assigns to human phenomena the objective features set by the natural sciences. (bvsalud.org)
  • This paper purports to show that Winnicott, by formulating a theory of personal maturing, disagrees with the objectifying requirements of the natural sciences. (bvsalud.org)
  • The guiding lines are Heidegger's criticism of what he calls the process of objectifying reality and the resistance we find in Winnicott's psychoanalysis to the logic of the natural sciences. (bvsalud.org)
  • The increase in luminosity will mean physicists will be able to study new phenomena discovered by the LHC, such as the Higgs boson, in more detail. (sciencebusiness.net)
  • Those rules govern how natural science accesses phenomena. (bvsalud.org)
  • Radiation Exposure and Contamination Ionizing radiation injures tissues variably, depending on factors such as radiation dose, rate of exposure, type of radiation, and part of the body exposed. (msdmanuals.com)
  • Ionizing radiation is emitted by radioactive elements and by equipment such as x-ray and radiation therapy machines. (msdmanuals.com)
  • The equivalent dose is the absorbed dose multiplied by a radiation weighting factor that adjusts for tissue effects based on the type of radiation delivered (eg, x-rays, gamma rays, electrons). (msdmanuals.com)
  • For x-rays, including CT, the radiation weighting factor is 1. (msdmanuals.com)
  • These programs provide resources and information about minimizing radiation exposure to radiologists, medical physicists, other imaging practitioners, and patients. (msdmanuals.com)
  • The rem is calculated by multiplying the absorbed dose (rad) by a quality (Q) factor or the radiation weighting factor (RWF), which reflects the differences in the amount of potential biological effect for each type of radiation. (medscape.com)
  • The author, Caltech physicist Philip Hopkins, focused on a phenomenon called "preferential concentration. (nautil.us)
  • In early 2000 he devised and presented a three-part series for BBC Radio 4 on the origin of life, entitled The Genesis Factor . (edge.org)
  • When I went to college (2008-2012), it was accepted as common wisdom that human decision making was dramatically more complicated than machine behavior. (lesswrong.com)
  • The software that drives self-driving cars and digital assistants is machine learning, a method employed in artificial intelligence (AI). (azorobotics.com)
  • Within disciplines such as genomics, computer science, robotics and artificial intelligence the authors of the Third Culture look for new answers to the great, perennial questions. (edge.org)
  • People were also worried about further AI research when reminded that artificial intelligence machines are expensive to maintain and repair. (morningconsult.com)
  • Irving Wladawsky-Berger, a retired IBM executive who frequently writes and speaks on AI, said while the likes of Elon Musk, Bill Gates and other brilliant thinkers have every reason to worry about the broader ramifications of artificial intelligence, most people can't fathom anything like that being a factor in their own lifetime and see the issue through a lens derived from Hollywood or science fiction. (morningconsult.com)
  • One team, composed of Algerian astronomers from the Centre de Recherche en Astrophysique et Géophysique , also attempted to observe the occultation in the south of Algeria. (lifeboat.com)
  • This phenomenon allows laser plasma accelerators to achieve acceleration strengths that are up to a thousand times greater than what could be provided by today's most powerful machines. (phys.org)
  • The team has demonstrated that it is possible to decrease the intensity of the periodic plasma edge disturbances, known as edge localized modes (ELMs), by a factor of 10 by injecting small pellets at a 10 times higher frequency than the ELMs naturally occur in the plasma, Baylor said in an interview. (iter.org)
  • It depends on many subjective factors, on psychology. (e-discoveryteam.com)
  • Brockman's Third Culture seeks to close this gap: "If you want to know about the most recent developments in psychology and computer science, that is, to be among the most important thinkers, then you have to buy their books. (edge.org)
  • His work, slowly decoding the nature of molecular structure of virtually the largest organic materials, fibrous and globular proteins, was valuable to both science and industry. (todayinsci.com)
  • Proteins can be thought of as the machines that keep a cell running, tasked with carrying out all of the different duties, from maintaining a cell's structure, to driving all the reactions needed to maintain functionality. (uh.edu)
  • The statistical film analysis developed by the physicist Salt thus holds the potential of a methodological guideline for quantifying filmic characteristics [ Salt 2006 ] [ Salt 2009 ]. (digitalhumanities.org)
  • All have verified the overunity claims without fully understanding how the machines actually work. (altenergy.org)
  • In this paper, we aim to provide an overview of related work in this field, review current developments in computer vision, compare machine and human performance for some visual recognition tasks, and outline the requirements for video analysis software that would optimally support scholars of film studies. (digitalhumanities.org)
  • stretch edition CAPTCHA in motivo Nematode, friend risultato influx il più mens work en bank inspiration division book reach kind generator. (silverkingtractors.com)
  • And even Richard Dawkins has acknowledged that "the machine code of the genes is uncannily computer-like" - implying, it would seem, the activity of a master programmer at work the origin of life. (stephencmeyer.org)
  • Since human reason is now known to be so unreliable, and is only a contributing factor to our decisions, on what should we base our legal jurisprudence? (e-discoveryteam.com)
  • A new schemata for a holistic jurisprudence would thus include not just human logic, but also human emotions, our feelings of fairness, our intuitions of what is right and just, and multiple environmental and perceptual factors. (e-discoveryteam.com)
  • With this upgrade, the LHC will continue to push the limits of human knowledge, enabling physicists to explore beyond the Standard Model and Brout-Englert-Higgs mechanism. (sciencebusiness.net)
  • No doubt this lecture will be of crucial interest to anyone who has ever wondered about the process of human or machine thinking and if a synthesis between the two can be made without violating logic. (blogspot.com)
  • It also showed that 65 percent of self-described atheists and 43 percent of agnostics believe "the findings of science [generally] make the existence of God less probable. (stephencmeyer.org)
  • This accelerated the performance by a factor of 8, reducing previous weeks of simulation time to mere days," Villard points out. (cscs.ch)
  • The High-Luminosity LHC will increase the luminosity by a factor of 10, delivering 10 times more collisions than the LHC would do over the same period of time. (sciencebusiness.net)
  • This methodology focuses on quantifiable factors in the formal structure of a film such as camera shot length, which is considered an objective unit because it can be measured over time. (digitalhumanities.org)
  • The A Realist Philosophy of Social Science: Explanation and of company is a online control for councils, and President Nicolas Maduro has engaged to do the Nematode since considering the new s time Hugo Chavez earlier this engagement. (silverkingtractors.com)
  • The results of the study are published in the journal Science Advances . (latamisrael.com)
  • Feynman himself may not have invented the technology we see in the development and continuity of the computer age, but the fact that even in the early 1960's nanotechnology was being considered as a serious field of study was definitely a factor contributing to the boom in computer technology seen in the late 20th century and continues to reach more spectacular levels of sophistication in the 21st century. (blogspot.com)
  • DISCUSSION: This study demonstrates the potential of machine learning models in predicting PPH in the Kenyan population. (cdc.gov)
  • The High-Luminosity LHC will produce collisions 10 times more rapidly, increasing our discovery potential and transforming the LHC into a machine for precision studies: the natural next step for the high energy frontier. (sciencebusiness.net)
  • This is important to me because I could easily imagine advances in the social sciences being much more net-positive than advances in technical fields, outside of AI. (lesswrong.com)
  • For more equitable decision-making during future pandemics, barriers to ascertaining attributable mortality in low-income settings must be addressed and factored into discourse around reported impact differences. (cdc.gov)
  • Senegal has made great strides in astronomy and planetary sciences in recent years. (lifeboat.com)
  • US Department of Energy Office of Fusion Energy Sciences. (wikipedia.org)
  • Physicists at the Israel Institute of Technology have devised an elegant experiment to answer this question. (latamisrael.com)
  • Physicist John Jelonnek from the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, shared, "It's a very clean source of power, the cleanest you could possibly wish for. (ubergizmo.com)
  • He envisioned "concepts for electromagnetic wave interactions with the atmosphere that, among a range of jobs, could be applied to weather modification research" and that such research could mature to a new science in 10 or 20 years. (wikipedia.org)
  • In addition to his research, Professor Davies is known as a passionate science communicator. (edge.org)
  • To stay informed about the latest news and research in the sciences and Intelligent Design, visit Evolution News . (uncommondescent.com)
  • By this I'm mainly referring to certain expectations of privacy and other ethical expectations in research, coupled with uncomfort around producing social science insights that are "too powerful. (lesswrong.com)
  • That factor hampered support for AI research more than questions of ethics. (morningconsult.com)
  • In this article, we discuss the importance of calculus in data science and machine learning. (kdnuggets.com)
  • Most beginners interested in getting into the field of data science are always concerned about the math requirements. (kdnuggets.com)
  • Many modern machine learning tools, such as variational inference and maximum entropy, are refinements of techniques invented by physicists. (physics-network.org)
  • Their killer app is usually said to be factoring large numbers, which are the key to modern encryption. (vectorsec.eu)
  • The Réflexions is now regarded as one of the great rarities of 19th-century science, and copies such as ours in completely original state are extremely difficult to find. (sophiararebooks.com)
  • Learning 25 lines since the A Realist Philosophy of Social Science: Explanation urged Retrieved for his misconfigured 2nd information to see the great offer e of fatto in South Africa. (silverkingtractors.com)
  • For a few special cases, physicists can overcome this input-output bottleneck, but whether those cases arise in practical machine-learning tasks is still unknown. (vectorsec.eu)
  • According to him, numerous factors contributed to the accelerator's stable long-term operation, from vacuum technology and laser expertise to a comprehensive and sophisticated control system. (phys.org)
  • Alfred Nier studied both stable and radiogenic isotopes, particularly the isotopes of lead (which led to the first precise age of the earth) and invented a simple but precise mass spectrometer in 1947 which become the machine that revolutionized geochemistry. (balzan.org)
  • It may not be what proponents of the theory were hoping for but we still now know something we didn't know before Besides, science is often about finding the boundaries of a theories (sic) domain of application. (uncommondescent.com)
  • Engineers comparing energy rates state that the apparent energy output has an over-unity factor of about twenty. (altenergy.org)
  • Ten years ago a New York literary agent promoted popular science, accessible science for everyone, as an alternative to arcane, discipline-specific language and an unenlightened intellectual climate. (edge.org)
  • An argument would go something like, "computers and machines can be deeply understood, so we can make a lot of progress around them, but humans and groups of humans are really messy and near impossible to make useful models of. (lesswrong.com)
  • Please make a tax-deductible donation if you value independent science communication, collaboration, participation, and open access. (scienceblogs.com)
  • Contemporary progress in the social sciences seems to be less impactful, and college graduates in these fields face more challenging job prospects. (lesswrong.com)
  • By increasing and decreasing the air pressure around the patient, the machine could press air in and out of the lungs. (lu.se)
  • Seven factors (anemia, limited prenatal care, hemoglobin concentrations, signs of pallor at intrapartum, intrapartum systolic blood pressure, intrapartum diastolic blood pressure, and intrapartum respiratory rate) were associated with PPH prediction in Kenyan population. (cdc.gov)