Alan Turing
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Bank of England reveals which animals could feature on new banknotes
Bank of England reveals which animals could feature on new banknotes Animals are set to replace historical figures on Bank of England notes in the biggest such change since the 1960s The Bank of England is planning on replacing historical figures on banknotes with animals - chosen by the public. Gone will be Sir Winston Churchill on the £5, Jane Austen on the £10, JMW Turner on the £20, and Alan Turing on the £50 note. Instead, they will feature a selection of wildlife, native to the UK,...
How human error became a weapon against large language models
Recently, a friend told me over coffee about some disheartening feedback she had received. “They said it was good,” she said, “but that it read like it was written by AI.” Knowing her, I understood immediately what had happened.
Dolphins, foxes and butterflies among animals which could feature on new UK banknotes
Dolphins, foxes and butterflies among animals which could feature on new UK banknotes The new designs will replace historical figures such as Winston Churchill, who have featured on banknotes since 2016 - Bookmark - CommentsGo to comments The familiar faces of historical figures on Bank of England banknotes are set be replaced by a vibrant array of British wildlife. Dolphins, foxes, butterflies, owls, bumblebees and sharks are among the animals that could appear on banknotes in the future....
Public asked to help select UK wildlife to appear on new banknote series
News release The public are being asked to give their views on a selection of wildlife, native to the UK, that will appear on the next series of banknotes in a consultation launched today. Working with a panel of wildlife experts from across the UK, the Bank of England has produced a shortlist of animals that could become the central image on the £5, £10, £20 and £50 notes. The list has been grouped into three categories, which cover a variety of species and environments.
Human-Like Neural Nets by Catapulting
Human-like Neural Nets by Catapulting Speculative proposal to create artificial neural nets with human-like performance by high-learning-rate/regularization training of overparameterized NNs to trigger catapulting/grokking. Over-parameterization as a route to true generalization would resolve many outstanding mysteries of artificial versus natural intelligence. There are many mysteries about deep learning and human intelligence, but we could describe the biggest anomaly this way: why are...
Turing Patterns for Multimedia: Reaction-Diffusion Multi-Modal Fusion for Language-Guided Video Moment Retrieval
Announce Type: new Abstract: Video-language models are pivotal for tasks such as moment retrieval and highlight detection, yet they often struggle to capture the dynamic, non-linear interactions between temporal video sequences and textual semantics. Existing approaches, relying on static cross-attention or prompt-tuning mechanisms, fail to adaptively model the evolving relationships between modalities, leading to suboptimal alignment and limited generalization. Inspired by systems biology,...
Anthropic wants caution but the market wants more AI
analysis The latest news from the Western AI Front is that Anthropic Inc, the US-based creator of Claude, has called for a "global freeze" on the development of AI, so humanity can catch up. Except it didn't really. In a long blog post on Anthropic's website headed "When AI builds itself", all about how Claude is not only writing its own code but "proposing its own experiments", it was explained that "the human role is narrowing at each step in the AI development process".
Bank defends idea to replace banknote historical figures with dolphins and owls
Bank defends idea to replace banknote historical figures with dolphins and owls Animal include dolphin, a fox, a butterfly, an owl, a bumblebee, and a shark - Bookmark - CommentsGo to comments The Bank of England has defended its decision to feature wildlife on the next series of banknotes, a move that will see historical figures replaced. This comes after the Bank launched a public consultation earlier this month, inviting views on a selection of UK native wildlife. Working with a panel of...
‘Putting biodiversity in our hands’: British wildlife will soon be celebrated on banknotes
Some say 'animal underdogs' have been left off the shortlist, which is now open to a public vote. Historical figures like Winston Churchill will soon be replaced by native wildlife on UK banknotes. In a public consultation run by the Bank of England, the theme of nature came out on top.
UK wants public to vote on wildlife to replace Churchill on bank notes
Greedy pigs, bear markets and unicorn start-ups. There are plenty of animals associated with money. A basking shark and a common frog don’t tend to come to mind.