Episodes
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This week we are back with our regular panelists! Kyle brings us a short article exploring science fiction impacting AI titled "Survey Finds Science Fiction One of Many Factors Impacting Views of AI Technology." George brings us an article about using thousands fo computers from universities, companies and volunteers to train one huge transformer, titled "Train Vast Neural Networks Together." Last but not least Lan brings us the paper this week! She discusses the paper "AutoML-Zero: Evolving Machine Learning Algorithms From Scratch."
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We are back with other guest this week! We have NLP/ML research scientist, Fredrik Olsson joining us. He discusses the work "Why You Should Do NLP Beyond English." Lan brings us a news item, "Research News: DNA Storage." George talks about the article "Discovering Symbolic Models from Deep Learning with Inductive Biases." Last but not least, Kyle brings us the paper this week. He brings the paper, "Machine Reasoning to Assess Pandemics Risks: Case of USS Theodore Roosevelt."
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Episodes manquant?
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Rachel Bittner, a research scientist at Spotify, joins us in our discussion this week! She brings us the paper "Few-Shot Sound Event Detection." Lan discusses an article about fairness of search results. George talks about a blog post from England about an algorithm grading exams and the controversy around it. Last but not least, Kyle brings us an article titled "Eye-Catching Advances in Some AI Fields are not Real."
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Back with our regular panelists! This week Lan brings us an article about the clothing subscription service Stitch Fix called "Multi-Armed Bandits and the Stitch Fix Experimentation Platform | Stitch Fix Technology – Multithreaded." Kyle discusses a news item titled "Shrinking Deep Learning's Carbon Footprint." Last but not least George brings the paper this week titled "Aligning AI With Shared Human Values."
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Back again with our regular panelists! This week George brings us an interesting article about how an AI developed to identify individual birds without tagging. Kyle discusses the news item "New York legislature votes to halt facial recognition tech in schools for two years." Last but not least, Lan brings the paper this week! She discusses the paper "A deep learning approach for staging embryonic tissue isolates with small data."
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Back again with our regular panelists! Today Lan brings us a article she found from Reddit about Gradio. George brings us a post about the psychology techniques used in AI. Last but not least, Kyle brings our paper this week about automatic essay test scoring!
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Back again with another episode with our regular panelists! This week Kyle discusses the article from The Scientist "How Social Isolation Affects the Brain." Lan brings us an article titled "National University of Singapore used Intel Neuromorphic chip to develop touch-sensing robotic 'skin.'" Last but not least, George brings us the paper this week! He talks about Reinforcement Learning, bringing the paper "One Policy to Control Them All: Shared Modular Policies for Agent-Agnostic Control."
All works are linked in the show notes.
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Back again with our regular panelists! George takes us on a discussion about the game NetHack from the blog post "The NetHack Learning Environment." Kyle brings us an article titled "Where the Latest COVID-19 Models Think We're Headed - And Why They Disagree." Last but not least, Lan brings us the paper this week! She brings us the paper "Deconstructing Lottery Tickets: Zeros, Signs, and the Supermask."
All works are linked in the show notes.
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This week we have our regular panel of Lan, George and Kyle! George brings us a blog post "What I Learned From Looking at 200 Machine Learning Tools." Which, the author, talks about a list complied of all of the AI/ML tools he could find. Lan brings us a news article "Making Blurry Faces Photorealistic Only Goes So Far." This article discusses how AI researchers discover inherent resolution limit to "upsampling" of pixelated faces. Last but not least, Kyle brings us the paper for this week! He brings the paper, "Logical Neural Networks." This paper proposes a novel framework seamlessly providing key properties of both neural nets (learning) and symbolic logic (knowledge and reasoning).
All works are linked in the show notes. -
We are back with our regular panel this week! Starting off we have Lan who brings us the article "Biosensors May Hold the Key to Mass Coronavirus Testing." Which talks about tech startups beginning to develop chips that signal the presence of the coronavirus RNA, antibodies, and antigens. George brings us a blog post all about BLEURT, titled "BLEURT: Learning Robust Metrics for Text Generation." Last but not least, Kyle discusses the main paper this week! He brought us a paper discussing DeepFakes popping up in court rooms with the paper titled "Courts and Lawyers Struggles With Growing Prevalence of DeepFakes."
All works will be linked in the show notes.
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We're back with a special guest panelist Leonardo Apolonio! He brings us the main paper this week titled "Movement Pruning: Adaptive Sparsity by Fine-Tuning." George shows us a blog post discussing GPT-3. Lan introduces us to an article about misinformation related to Covid-19. Last but not least, Kyle also has a topic about Covid-19 addressing contact tracing apps!
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Another week, another episode! We are back again with our regular panelists. George brings us a clinical field study with an AI that is being used to diagnose blindness. Lan discusses the article titled "AI Infrastructure for Everyone, Now Open Sourced." Last but not least, Kyle brings us our paper for the week. He brings us the paper "Extending Machine Learning Classification Capabilities with Histogram Reweighting."
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This weeks episode we have the regular panel back together! George brought us the blog post from Google AI, "Chip Design with Deep Reinforcement Learning." Kyle brings us a news item from CNET, "How People with Down Syndrome are Improving Google Assistant." Lan brings us the paper this week! She discusses the paper "Fooling LIME and SHAP: Adversarial Attacks on Post hoc Explanation Methods."
All works mentioned will be linked in the show notes.
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This week on Journal Club we have another panelist! Jesus Rogel-Salazar joins us this week to discuss the paper Automatic Detection of Tympanic Membrane and Middle Ear Infection. Kyle talks about the relationship between Covid-19 and Carbon Emissions. George tells us about the new Hateful Memes Challenge from Facebook. Lan joins us to talk about Google's AI Explorables.
All mentioned work can be found in the show notes.
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This week we have a guest joining us, Francisco J. Azuaje G! He brings us the paper "How to Develop Machine Learning Models for Healthcare." Lan discusses "Animal AI Olympics," a reinforcement learning competition inspired by animal cognition. Kyle talks about WhatsApp and discusses the article "Why New Contact Tracing Apps Have A Critical WhatsApp-Sized Problem." Last but not least: George! He brings us his blog post about comparing TF-IDF and BERT vectorisation for speaker prediction.
All works discussed can be found in the show notes.
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Today on the show Kyle discusses research which suggests that time on screens has little impact on kids' social skills. Lan talks about DeeplyTough a deep learning framework targeting the protein pocket matching problem - try to answer whether a pair of protein pockets can bind to the same ligand.George's paper this week is about defining a grammar for interpretable agents. By basing this formalism on a corpus of human explanation dialogues the authors hope to produce a more "grounded" protocol.
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George talks about OpenAI's Microscope, a collection of visualisations of the neurons and layers in 6 famous vision models. This library hopes to make analysis of these models a community effort. Lan talks about Exploring chemical space with AI and how that may change pharmaceutical drug discovery and development. Kyle leads a discussion about the paper "Extending Adversarial Attacks to Produce Adversarial Class Probability Distributions" which shows another control that an adversarial attacker can put in place to better fool machine learning models.
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Today George takes inspiration and the gym environment from Kaggle's ConnectX competition and shows off and attempt to design an interpretable Connect 4 Agent with DQN! Lan discusses the paper "The Dataset Nutrition Label," which is a framework to facilitate higher data quality standards by Sarah Holland and co-authors, from the Assembly program at the Berkman Klein Center at Harvard University & MIT Media Lab. Last but not least, Kyles leads the panel in a discussion about encryption keys!
Lan discusses Dataset nutrition Label
Kyle discusses encryption keys
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Today George talks about the use of Machine Learning to diagnose Cancer from a blood test. By sampling 'cell-free-DNA' this test is capable of identifying 50 different types of Cancer and the localized tissue of origin with a >90% accuracy. Lan leads a discussion of what robots and researchers in robotics may be able to contribute towards fighting the COVID-19 pandemic. Last but not least, Kyle leads the panel in a discussion about watermarking data!
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George's paper this week is Sanity Checks for Saliency Maps. This work takes stock of a group of techniques that generate local interpretability - and assesses their trustworthiness through two 'sanity checks'. From this analysis, Adebayo et al demonstrate that a number of these tools are invariant to the model's weights and could lead a human observer into confirmation bias. Kyle discusses AI and brings the question: How can AI help in a humanitarian crisis? Last but not least, Lan brings us the topic of Captum, an extensive interpretability library for PyTorch models.
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