- [Modération JNTP] Annulation de <pvlv84$kfj$14@dont-email.me> - 3 Updates
- Few Chinese researchers in the 'hard sciences' are regarded as global leaders in their fields compared with researchers in the US - 1 Update
- Hardware-software co-design approach could make neural networks less power hungry - 1 Update
- New AI computer vision system mimics how humans visualize and identify objects - 1 Update
Elephant Man <conanospamic@gmail.com>: Dec 22 06:57PM Article d'annulation émis par un modérateur JNTP via Nemo. |
Elephant Man <conanospamic@gmail.com>: Dec 22 06:57PM Article d'annulation émis par un modérateur JNTP via Nemo. |
Elephant Man <conanospamic@gmail.com>: Dec 23 09:33AM Article d'annulation émis par un modérateur JNTP via Nemo. |
Horizon68 <horizon@horizon.com>: Dec 22 12:01PM -0800 Hello.. Read this: Few Chinese researchers in the 'hard sciences' are regarded as global leaders in their fields compared with researchers in the US, or even Japan, which has much lower output. According to the closely watched Chinese ranking website Netbig, even China's leading laboratories or centres of excellence in such flagship fields as materials research, metals research and chemistry, including those affiliated to the prestigious Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS), are not ranked among the world's top 10. Read more here: https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/low-quality-studies-belie-hype-about-research-boom-in-china/ Thank you, Amine Moulay Ramdane. |
Horizon68 <horizon@horizon.com>: Dec 22 10:19AM -0800 Hello... Hardware-software co-design approach could make neural networks less power hungry Engineers have developed a neuroinspired hardware-software co-design approach that could make neural network training more energy-efficient and faster. Their work could one day make it possible to train neural networks on low-power devices such as smartphones, laptops and embedded devices. Read more here: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2018/12/181219191111.htm Thank you, Amine Moulay Ramdane. |
Horizon68 <horizon@horizon.com>: Dec 22 10:16AM -0800 Hello, Read this: New AI computer vision system mimics how humans visualize and identify objects Read more here: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2018/12/181220163210.htm Thank you, Amine Moulay Ramdane. |
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