Understanding AI psychosis

For some people who are developing relationships with AI tools, the technology is inducing delusions or distorted beliefs, a phenomenon referred to as “AI psychosis.” Dr. John Torous, psychiatrist for Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, joined “The Takeout” to discuss.

Research Advances in AI-Assisted Material Generation for Physical AI

Digital twins are vital for the training and testing of physical AI that can understand and perform complex actions in the real world. But building digital twins is slow and tedious. NVIDIA’s latest generative AI and rendering research showcases the potential to dramatically accelerate and scale these workflows.

These breakthroughs combine NVIDIA Cosmos World Foundation Models and advanced rendering technologies to allow developers to pair AI assistants with experts at the heart of digital twin and physical AI development. In these future workflows, experts will engage with AI assistants using simple language to quickly generate realistic, physically accurate base materials for 3D models. They can then fine-tune generated materials, adjusting properties such as roughness and texture to better reflect the real world.

This research, along with the workflows it enables, showcases the potential to quickly transform 3D models into large-scale, simulation-ready digital twins that can be used to train safe and efficient physical AI.

Wall Street Trader Life 1980s vs 90s vs Today | Experts By Decade | Daily Mail

Over the past 45 years, few industries have changed as radically as Wall Street. From the rise of electronic trading to shrinking bid-ask spreads and increased regulation, the trading floor of the 1980s is almost unrecognizable today. In this episode of Experts By Decade, we sit down with three veteran traders to explore how the financial industry has transformed — and what it’s like to survive the seismic shifts.

History Is Unfolding Right in Front of Us

In this video, we explore the unsettling implications of the increasingly popular philosophy known accelerationism, which, in some form or another, is quietly taking hold on the zeitgeist of the modern world. What does the future look like if technology continues to progress at the compounding rate it currently is? What is the end goal of technology’s seemingly unending and uncontrollable progress? Is it good for us? Do we even have a say in it?