If language is what makes us human, what does it mean now that large language models have gained “metalinguistic” abilities?
After 150 years of mystery, neuroscience has finally cracked the code on how language works in the brain—and the answer is surprisingly elegant.
Recently, there has been a lot of hullabaloo about the idea that large reasoning models (LRM) are unable to think. This is mostly due to a research article published by Apple, "The Illusion of ...
Oftentimes definitions can limit you, imposing unnecessary constraints, enclosing things within the four corners of a narrow, ...
The Catholic Church in the United States today is facing a crucial test. Will Catholic leadership accommodate and adapt ...
Duke’s reduction-in-force stipulates that staff positions within a department will be eliminated in reverse order of ...
Fast food chains rake in hundreds of billions in annual revenue, thanks to a portfolio of clever marketing tactics that build ...
Findings by the Truth, Justice and Peace Commission (TJPC), chaired by Prof. Chidi Odinkalu and established by the Anambra ...
Nick Bostrom literally wrote the book on superintelligence. When machines can do nearly everything better than we can, he says, we must ask what is our purpose.
Kenya's newly enacted Computer Misuse and Cybercrimes (Amendments) Act, 2025, risks criminalizing legitimate online speech and its overbroad provisions should be repealed, Human Rights Watch said ...
In Hans Christian Andersen's folktale, The Emperor's New Clothes, when a child cries out that the emperor is naked, he isn't revealing a secret. Everyone already knows it. What changes in that instant ...
Instead of carefully targeted arrests long practiced by the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, President Donald ...