The Uganda Institute of Information and Communications Technology (UICT) has launched its state-of-the-art AVR Cluster Center ...
ARTWORK painted by a humanoid robot has fetched $1.3million at auction, far exceeding expectations, in a world first. Ai-Da, named after Ada Lovelace, is the first robot to have its artwork sold ...
From November 14 through November 19, this year’s gathering offers hundreds of sessions on basic, translational, and clinical science in rheumatology and nearly 400 oral abstracts highlighting novel ...
Researchers with the ECOG-ACRIN Cancer Research Group (ECOG-ACRIN) and PrECOG, LLC, will present a variety of abstracts that aim to improve treatments for patients with lymphoma and acute leukemias at ...
The artist’s large abstract canvases are well worth seeing in person, with their vivid, startling and nuanced colors and subjects that are the stuff of dreams. An installation view of “Hilma af Klint” ...
A link exists between 6,000-year-old engravings on cylindrical seals used on clay tablets and cuneiform, the world’s oldest ...
Encinitas Commission for the Arts to issue recommendation Monday on sea creature, abstract art piece and stone Hermes ...
Her piece, an abstract portrait of Alan Turing titled "AI God," is expected to fetch between $120,000 and $180,000. Turing, known as the "Father of Modern Computer Science," is honoured through this ...
A robot powered by artificial intelligence created an abstract portrait of Alan Turing that could sell for an estimated ...
The Rocky Mountain Community Science Conference (RMCSC), hosted by the University of Wyoming’s Biodiversity Institute in collaboration with Audubon Rockies, will take place Thursday, Dec. 5, from 9 a.
A HUMANOID robot that uses AI algorithms, cameras and metal arms to paint is having artwork sold by a world renowned auction house. Ai-Da, as the robot is known, will be the first robot to have ...
Scientists use jargon and complicated language to describe their work. Regular folks ‘get it’ more when descriptions are simpler – and think better of the researchers themselves.