By leveraging probabilistic models and optimization techniques, Professor Kochenderfer aims to design robust systems capable of adapting to real-world variability.
A Stanford HAI seminar noted the industry-academia divide on AI that is woefully growing. Alarm bells ring. Here's the upshot and what can be done to right this ship.
LinkedIn founder Reid Hoffman has been immersed in Silicon Valley since his August 1967 birth in Palo Alto, California, in the shadow of Stanford University, where he and fellow technology luminary Peter Thiel became friends as college students during the 1980s.
Researchers from Stanford and leading institutions introduced the Artificial Intelligence Pricing Model (AIPM), integrating transformer-based architectures into asset pricing. By leveraging cross-asset information and nonlinearity,
The AI Advisory at Stanford Committee encourages users to employ AI as they would want others to use it with them, in a new report to promote ethical AI use across campus.
This week, some auto industry observers felt a creeping sense of déjà vu. Seemingly out of nowhere, a Chinese firm made international headlines by besting Western companies at the tech they supposedly invented.
Studying the cell is a difficult and time-consuming process, but scientists have pinpointed generative AI as a potential way to make it easier. The idea is to develop an AI virtual cell that would behave the same way a real cell does.
Despite the AI hype, the systems require consistent monitoring and staffing to put in place and maintain. The process can be complicated — and expensive.
Following a review of agencies’ AI actions, researchers report that governance is still “hindered by limited transparency, resource constraints, and inconsistencies in meeting mandates.”
Quibim says its longer-term plan is to create digital twins of the entire human body, serving “dynamic models” that help the medical community better understand the human body. That all begins at the “organ and lesion level,” as demonstrated by QP-Prostate.
PM with a registration and lunch session, followed by an opening speech from BrushO's CMO, Gary Baiton, who detailed the design philosophy and core technology behind the BrushO AI-Powered Toothbrush.
BrushO, a leader in oral health innovation, will debut its groundbreaking AI-Powered Toothbrush at Stanford University. The event will not only showcase the revolutionary features of the smart toothbrush but also highlight BrushO’s vision of leveraging AI and blockchain technology to build a global oral health data platform,