University College London (UCL) researchers have achieved a fascinating leap in neural decoding. The team reconstructed 10-second video clips from the mice’s brain activity alone. While previous ...
Among those who use AI on the job, participants experiencing ‘AI brain fry’ are 39 per cent more likely to make major mistakes, as per the study.
BrainWhisperer is Tether’s Brain-to-text project. Tether is earmarking resources to build technologies that push the borders of intracranial electrocortical decoding. The latest result is a variable ...
Researchers have coined the term “AI brain fry” after workers reported mental fogginess from the overuse of AI tools in their jobs.
A new study reveals that astrocytes—star-shaped support cells traditionally viewed as passive partners of neurons—play a ...
Artificial intelligence now plays Go, paints pictures, and even converses like a human. However, there remains a decisive difference: AI requires far more electricity than the human brain to operate.
Until now, conventional 3D cell cultures have often been either too rigid or too unstable to realistically reproduce the ...
Retinal progenitor cells (RPCs) can differentiate into all major retinal cell types during development, but they permanently lose this capacity as one grows older, leaving the adult retina with no ...
Researchers have developed a collaborative brain-robot interface for people with severe motor impairments. Their findings ...
Eye movements may reveal hidden knowledge we don’t realize we have, offering clues to how people learn skills and become experts.
Artificial intelligence can give some workers "brain fry" if overused, according to a new study published in Harvard Business Review.