By knitting together multiple components and data streams, multimodal AI offers the promise of smarter, more human-like systems…
From ACM NewsSamuel Greengard| December 7, 2023
An edited collection of advanced computing news from Communications of the ACM, ACM TechNews, other ACM resources, and news sites around the Web.
Computational models are tackling the complexity of biology, from single-celled microbes to human organs.Neil Savage From Communications of the ACM | February 1, 2013
Side channels give out information that can be used to crack secrets, but researchers are identifying the holes and trying to close them.Neil Savage From Communications of the ACM | January 1, 2013
With the right approach, data mining can discover unexpected side effects and drug interactions.Neil Savage From Communications of the ACM | October 1, 2012
Judea Pearl's passionate advocacy of the importance of probability and causality helped revolutionize artificial intelligence.Neil Savage From Communications of the ACM | June 1, 2012
Computer scientists are teaching machines to run experiments, make inferences from the data, and use the results to conduct new experiments.Neil Savage From Communications of the ACM | May 1, 2012
Online games are harnessing humans' skills to solve scientific problems that are currently beyond the ability of computers.Neil Savage From Communications of the ACM | March 1, 2012
Computers that tease out patterns from clinical data could improve patient diagnosis and care.Neil Savage From Communications of the ACM | January 1, 2012
Developing an IT ecosystem for health could improve — and transform — the practice of medicine.Neil Savage From Communications of the ACM | September 1, 2011
Teaching computers to understand pictures could lead to search engines capable of identifying and organizing large datasets of visual information.Neil Savage From Communications of the ACM | May 1, 2011
Researchers are mining Twitter's vast flow of data to measure public sentiment, follow political activity, and detect earthquakes and flu outbreaks.Neil Savage From Communications of the ACM | March 1, 2011
Purdue University's Science of Information Center seeks new principles to answer the question 'What is information?'Neil Savage From Communications of the ACM | February 1, 2011
A better understanding of heavy-tailed probability distributions can improve activities from Internet commerce to the design of server farms.Neil Savage From Communications of the ACM | June 1, 2010
If search engines can extract more meaning from text and better understand what people are looking for, the Web's resources could be accessed more effectively.Neil Savage From Communications of the ACM | January 1, 2010