Natural language boosts LLM performance in coding, planning, and robotics
Three neurosymbolic methods help language models find better abstractions within natural language, then use those representations to execute complex tasks.
Three neurosymbolic methods help language models find better abstractions within natural language, then use those representations to execute complex tasks.
More than 80 students and faculty from a dozen collaborating institutions became immersed at the intersection of computation and life sciences and forged new ties to MIT and each other.
“Minimum viewing time” benchmark gauges image recognition complexity for AI systems by measuring the time needed for accurate human identification.
Jörn Dunkel and Surya Ganguli ’98, MNG ’98 receive Science Polymath awards; Josh Tenenbaum is named AI2050 Senior Fellow.
Researchers coaxed a family of generative AI models to work together to solve multistep robot manipulation problems.
Images that humans perceive as completely unrelated can be classified as the same by computational models.
Three graduate students forged a path to the same Picower Institute lab through participating in the MIT Summer Research Program in Biology and Neuroscience.
Through her organization, Sprouting, Taylor Baum is empowering teachers to teach coding and computer science in their classrooms and communities.
Using insights into how people intuit others’ emotions, researchers have designed a model that approximates this aspect of human social intelligence.
MIT researchers uncover the structural properties and dynamics of deep classifiers, offering novel explanations for optimization, generalization, and approximation in deep networks.
Neuroscience PhD student Fernanda De La Torre uses complex algorithms to investigate philosophical questions about perception and reality.
MIT scientists have discovered a population of neurons that light up whenever we see images of food.
A new computational model could explain differences in recognizing facial emotions.
Postbac Jessica Chomik-Morales hopes to inspire the next generation of Spanish-speaking scientists with her podcast, “Mi Ultima Neurona.”
Martin Luther King Jr. Scholar bridges disciplines to translate vision into elegant math and neuroscience theory.