Ryeoun's latest K-drama thriller, Bloody Flower, has come to an end after eight episodes. What made the story worth watching was the mix of crime investigation, legal drama and psychological elements.
A structured medical triage test showed ChatGPT performing at levels that surprised researchers — but some physicians say the real surprise is how long we've avoided comparing AI's risks to the risks ...
Wall Street economists push back against Citrini Research's AI doom scenario, arguing productivity booms historically drive ...
OpenAI has been found testing a $100/month ChatGPT Pro Lite plan in checkout code, offering unlimited top-model access and ...
The pedophile plutocrat had some peculiar predilections—especially for academics and thinkers who showed a potential to further his grand experiments in inhumanity.
Public misunderstanding about medical aid in dying in the United States falls into two distinct categories – misinformation and uncertainty – and each is driven by different forces, according to ...
Public misunderstanding about medical aid in dying in the United States falls into two distinct categories—misinformation and ...
One of the most common ways meteorologists convey the threat of rain is using Probability of Precipitation. Yet, it remains one of the most misunderstood tools in the weather communication tool box.
Moving beyond the traditional paradigms of "Thinking with Text" (e.g., Chain-of-Thought) and "Thinking with Images", we propose "Thinking with Video"—a new paradigm that unifies visual and textual ...
Natural Language to SQL (NL2SQL) enables intuitive interactions with databases by transforming natural language queries into structured SQL statements. Despite recent advancements in enhancing ...
Human reasoning is traditionally modeled through rational-order frameworks that assume stability, separability, and coherence. Yet across judgment, valuation, perception, and social decision-making, ...
This post is in response to Introducing Your Brain on Politics By Chris Mooney As promised yesterday, this post is a response to Yale researcher Dan Kahan’s thoughtful critique (here, here, and here) ...