Sentences with phrase «draw from artificial intelligence»

While remaining closely involved with the traditional PC and mobile industries, the gaming industry will draw from artificial intelligence, wearables, virtual reality, big data, cloud service and other emerging technologies and use animation, literature, movie & TV, live broadcasting, themed amusement park and other traditional entertainment industries to create more disruptive value.»

Not exact matches

Meta — which, in the words of cofounder Sam Molyneux, uses «artificial intelligence to analyze new scientific knowledge as it's published» — partners with academic journals to access many thousands of scientific papers and draw insight from them (beyond the keywords, that is) with the help of a machine learning tool developed by SRI International, which created Apple's spectral personal assistant, Siri.
Connie draws from a domain of knowledge from WayBlazer — an artificial intelligence agency specific to the hospitality and travel industry.
MOOCs burst into the public consciousness in 2011 with the online debut of a Stanford professor's course on artificial intelligence that drew 160,000 students from around the globe.
From The Infinity Engine, the exhibition splits into Hershman Leeson's early works which are characterized by drawing, painting, sculpture, and feminist performance and protest pieces, and mid-career works which focus on the internet, artificial intelligence and technology.
At once a pointed critic and a sly practical jokester, Leeson has worked across a wide range of mediums, from drawing, painting and sculpture to interactive films, net - based media works, and artificial intelligence.
The second is artificial intelligence (AI): as computers train themselves, draw conclusions from big data too voluminous for human - powered analysis, and build on the conclusions to ask and answer further levels of question, the assumptions about the data and the conclusions are more remote from the knowledge and control of the systems» designers.
This whole field artificial intelligence and law seems to me to be under theorized from a jurisprudential perspective, in the sense of drawing from relatively simplistic and outdated jurisprudence.
One reason this article caught my attention is because I've been thinking about Kevin Lee's comment on my post a couple of weeks back where he said he thought the field of artificial intelligence and law seemed «under theorized from a jurisprudential perspective, in the sense of drawing from relatively simplistic and outdated jurisprudence.»
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