All posts tagged: written

Japanese scientists were pioneers of AI, yet they’re being written out of its history

Japanese scientists were pioneers of AI, yet they’re being written out of its history

The announcement of the artificial intelligence researchers John Hopfield and Geoffrey Hinton as this year’s Nobel laureates in physics spurred celebration and consternation over the status of AI in science and society. In Japan, however, another feeling dominates: frustration. “Japanese researchers should also have won,” an editorial in the Asahi Shimbun newspaper proclaimed. Congratulating Hopfield and Hinton, the Japanese Neural Network Society added pointedly: “We must not forget the role played by pioneer Japanese researchers in erecting the foundations of neural network research.” Neural networks are at the centre of contemporary AI. They are models for machines to learn independently through structures that, if often only loosely, are inspired by the human brain. So who are these pioneering Japanese AI researchers? In 1967, Shun’ichi Amari proposed a method of adaptive pattern classification, which enables neural networks to self-adjust the way they categorise patterns, through exposure to repeated training examples. Amari’s research anticipated a similar method known as “backpropagation,” one of Hinton’s key contributions to the field. In 1972, Amari outlined a learning algorithm (a set …

Behold the Oldest Written Text in the World: The Kish Tablet, Circa 3500 BC

Behold the Oldest Written Text in the World: The Kish Tablet, Circa 3500 BC

Image by José-Manuel Ben­i­to, via Wiki­me­dia Com­mons Some refer to the writ­ten Chi­nese lan­guage as ideo­graph­ic: that is, struc­tured accord­ing to a sys­tem in which each sym­bol rep­re­sents a par­tic­u­lar idea or con­cept, whether abstract or con­crete. That’s true of cer­tain Chi­nese char­ac­ters, but only a small minor­i­ty. Most of them are actu­al­ly logographs, each of which rep­re­sents a word or part of a word. But if you dig deep enough into their his­to­ry — and the his­to­ry of oth­er Asian lan­guages that use Chi­nese-derived vocab­u­lary — you’ll find that some start­ed out long ago as pic­tographs, designed visu­al­ly to rep­re­sent the thing to which they referred. That does­n’t hold true for Chi­nese alone: it appears, in fact, that all writ­ten lan­guages began as forms of pic­to­graph­ic “pro­to-writ­ing,” at least judg­ing by the ear­li­est texts cur­rent­ly known to man. If we look at the old­est of them all, the lime­stone “Kish tablet” unearthed from the site of the epony­mous ancient Sumer­ian city in mod­ern-day Iraq, we can in some sense “read” sev­er­al of the sym­bols …

Written by Human or Bot? Researchers Have a New Way to Tell

Written by Human or Bot? Researchers Have a New Way to Tell

Lots of stuff we read sounds like it was written by a bot — a chatbot or Large Language Model (LLM) like ChatGPT. But, according to a recent article at Wired, even the experts have a hard time being sure. After all, some people have always written like bots. Long before bots were invented. Others — because they work in bureaucracies — have bottiness thrust upon them. But then there are also students who trust the internet to write the papers that they should be learning to write themselves. That is more of a problem. The risk is not that they will grow up to write like bots but that they won’t be able to write anything because they’ve never done it. A sudden surge in familiar words? A research group hopes it has come up with a new detection method, at least for academic writing. As Ars Technica, editor Kyle Orland tells us, “excess words” started appearing much more often post-LLMs (i.e., 2023 and 2024).” Analyzing 14 million abstracts from science papers published on …

Chicago Fire: what happened to Otis? And why Yuri Sardarov was written out of the show

Chicago Fire: what happened to Otis? And why Yuri Sardarov was written out of the show

Yuri Sardarov made his mark on Chicago Fire, after signing on as Brian “Otis” Zvonecek in 2012. Following an impressive seven-year tenure on the show, however, the actor was brutally killed off in 2019, with Otis dying in a pressure valve explosion.  © GettyYuri Sardarov appeared on Chicago Fire from 2012 to 2019 Called to a mattress factory with the rest of Firehouse 51 in the season seven finale, the fan favorite was fatally wounded in the line of duty, and after a major cliffhanger, was confirmed dead in the series eight premiere.  So, what happened? As it turns out, the writers had given Otis’ death a great deal of thought after deciding that they needed to kill off a character. In an interview with TV Line, showrunner Derek Haas explained their reasoning.  © GettyOtis was killed off in a pressure valve explosion “I didn’t know what we were going to do when I wrote the ending to the season,” he began. “Then when I was [on] hiatus, I was talking to Andrea Newman and …

Russia Critic Kara-Murza Wins Pulitzer for Passionate Columns Written From Prison Cell

Russia Critic Kara-Murza Wins Pulitzer for Passionate Columns Written From Prison Cell

NEW YORK (AP) — Vladimir Kara-Murza, who has written columns as a contributor for The Washington Post from his prison cell in Russia, has won the Pulitzer Prize for commentary. Kara-Murza, 42, is a Russian politician, author and historian who has been imprisoned in Russia since April 2022. He was convicted of treason last year for denouncing the war in Ukraine. He is serving 25 years, the most severe sentence given to a Kremlin critic in modern Russia. He is among a growing number of dissidents held in increasingly harsh conditions under President Vladimir Putin’s political crackdown. The prize was awarded to Kara-Murza “for passionate columns written at great personal risk from his prison cell, warning of the consequences of dissent in Vladimir Putin’s Russia and insisting on a democratic future for his country,” according to the Pulitzer announcement on Monday. Kara-Murza wasn’t available to comment on receiving the award because of his imprisonment, The Washington Post reported. His wife, Evgenia Kara-Murza, thanked the newspaper on Monday “for making sure that the voice of Vladimir …

Electric, poignant, exquisitely written: inside the inaugural Women’s prize for nonfiction shortlist | Books

Electric, poignant, exquisitely written: inside the inaugural Women’s prize for nonfiction shortlist | Books

As chair of judges for the inaugural Women’s prize for nonfiction, it has been a privilege to read some of the best work produced in English by women in the last year. From our longlist of 16 fantastic titles, my fellow judges Venetia La Manna, Nicola Rollock, Anne Sebba, Kamila Shamsie and I have chosen a shortlist of six must-read books. The first (in order of author’s surname) is Thunderclap, by Observer art critic Laura Cumming. The author draws attention to the genius of an overlooked artist, Carel Fabritius and, by extension, makes us look anew at the whole of Dutch art. Amid this she weaves in sections of memoir about her artist father. Deeply researched and meticulously wrought, this is tender, electric and highly original. Cumming has a real gift for putting paintings into words: she helps the reader to see things that they might have otherwise missed. She is a master of structure, and her diction is gorgeous, while the revelation on the last page is breathtakingly poignant. Quick Guide Women’s prize for …

Rebel Wilson names Sacha Baron Cohen as ‘a**hole’ she has written about in new memoir | Ents & Arts News

Rebel Wilson names Sacha Baron Cohen as ‘a**hole’ she has written about in new memoir | Ents & Arts News

Rebel Wilson has named Sacha Baron Cohen as the “a**hole” who she has written about in her upcoming memoir. The Australian actress and comedian, 44, previously said she intended to write a chapter in the book about “a massive a**hole” she had previously worked with in Hollywood – though she did not reveal the person’s identity. However, in a post on Instagram on Monday, Wilson said the person she was referring to was Ali G and Borat star Baron Cohen. “I will not be bullied or silenced by high-priced lawyers or PR crisis managers,” she wrote. “The ‘a**hole’ I was talking about in one chapter of my book is: Sacha Baron Cohen”. In a previous now-deleted Instagram story – reported on by Us Weekly – Wilson accused Baron Cohen’s team of “trying to stop press coming out about my book”. “But the book WILL come out, and you will all know the truth,” she reportedly wrote. Baron Cohen, 52, worked alongside Wilson on the set of his 2016 spy action comedy Grimsby, also known as …

I’ve written about France for 20 years – here are my favourite places to visit | France holidays

I’ve written about France for 20 years – here are my favourite places to visit | France holidays

Landscapes When you can gaze on the salt pans of Guérande, near Nantes, cycle through lavender fields in Drôme, in the south-east, and bask in the splendour of the Cirque de Gavarnie in the Pyrénees, you have to wonder how France got so lucky with its diverse landscapes. Most recently, the volcanic landscape of the Massif Central captured my heart. The chain of extinct volcanoes runs south from the highest, Le Puy de Dôme (there’s a rack railway to the top) near Clermont-Ferrand. South of the rugged peaks in Cantal, the town of Chaudes-Aigues has two hot springs – Europe’s hottest at 65C and 82C – that spurt from spouts in the town square. Two hours east, the extraordinary town of Le Puy-en-Velay is the starting point for the medieval pilgrimage trail to Santiago de Compostela. Its Saint-Michel d’Aiguilhe chapel sits atop a basalt needle, while its other peaks are topped by the cathedral and a Notre Dame de France statue. Beaches Port Rolland cove on Brittany’s Côte de Granit Rose. Photograph: olrat/Alamy It isn’t just the landscapes …