A new study uses neural networks to prove that memory and individual recognition allow cooperation to defeat selfishness in the prisoner's dilemma.
The "prisoner's dilemma" is one of the most famous ideas in game theory. For decades, this game has been used to explain why selfishness often beats cooperation. In the prisoner's dilemma, two players ...
Cryo-EM imaging shows how cells assemble key microtubule proteins, helping explain rare genetic disorders linked to seizures, ...
Technology is not replacing accountants. But it is changing what accounting work involves, and the change is further along ...
Researchers at the Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto have discovered a gene that influences the behaviours commonly ...
A new study uses real-time fMRI neurofeedback to help depression patients reduce rumination by training specific brain ...
Anthropic has published a newly devised approach to interpreting AI. They call this NLA for natural language autoencoders. An ...
Regulators are coming for the AI models themselves, and those models can’t answer the questions they’re about to be asked.​ ...
New work explaining the inner workings of artificial intelligence could provide a way around the threat of AI "model collapse ...
Read more about Quantum machine learning shows promise for adaptive learning, but classrooms are not ready on Devdiscourse ...
Neurons, the uber-connected nerve cells that act as a main switchboard for the brain, are central to some incredibly ...
Scientists have discovered that the brain moves with abdominal contractions and this may help clear out waste while we ...