The Fourth Industrial Revolution represents a fundamental change in the way we live, work and relate to one another. It is a new chapter in human development, enabled by extraordinary technology advances commensurate with those of the first, second and third industrial revolutions. These advances are merging the physical, digital and biological worlds in ways that create both huge promise and potential peril. The speed, breadth and depth of this revolution is forcing us to rethink how countries develop, how organisations create value and even what it means to be human. The Fourth Industrial Revolution is about more than just technology-driven change; it is an opportunity to help everyone, including leaders, policy-makers and people from all income groups and nations, to harness converging technologies in order to create an inclusive, human-centred future. The real opportunity is to look beyond technology, and find ways to give the greatest number of people the ability to positively impact their families, organisations and communities.
Researchers have developed a method which quickly detects instances when neural networks make mistakes they shouldn’t.
A driverless electric truck began daily freight deliveries on a public road in Sweden on Wednesday, in what developer Einride and logistics customer DB Schenker described as a world first.
Can artificial intelligence (AI) help with our voting decisions?
In a study with 36 students, students correctly recalled over 25 percent more right answers with a QuizBot.
MIT researchers have developed a new machine-learning approach to discover an additional mechanism that helps some antibiotics kill bacteria.
Maximizing workforce productivity in a era of constant change means being aware of both employees' aspirations and emotional needs.
Artificial Intelligence is becoming the biggest technology of the information age, and we need to bake human judgement into it in order to use it fully.
The researchers fashioned the body out of shower hoses, which move through a gear while vacuum pumps control the robot’s suction cups.
Researchers have engineered flying robots to behave like hummingbirds, training them with machine learning algorithms based on various techniques the bird uses naturally every day.
Reliable data is vital when it comes to finding people in need of help, and more detailed maps could lead to more targeted outreach programmes.
As virtual reality becomes more common, it is being used as a way to give students a more hands-on approach to learning.
The age of autonomous cars could radically alter human behaviour and use of city streets, unless we implement safety precautions.