ScienceDaily: Strange Science News |
- Using stories to teach human values to artificial agents
- A new form of frozen water?
- Researchers create 'mini-brains' in lab to study neurological diseases
- Creating a color printer that uses a colorless, non-toxic ink inspired by nature
Using stories to teach human values to artificial agents Posted: 12 Feb 2016 05:02 PM PST Artificial intelligence technique Quixote teaches 'value alignment' to robots by training them to read stories, learn acceptable sequences of events and understand successful ways to behave in human societies. |
Posted: 12 Feb 2016 05:02 PM PST A research team has predicted a new molecular form of ice with a record-low density. If the ice can be synthesized, it would become the 18th known crystalline form of water and the first discovered in the US since before World War II. |
Researchers create 'mini-brains' in lab to study neurological diseases Posted: 12 Feb 2016 01:39 PM PST Researchers say they have developed tiny 'mini-brains' made up of many of the neurons and cells of the human brain -- and even some of its functionality -- and which can be replicated on a large scale. |
Creating a color printer that uses a colorless, non-toxic ink inspired by nature Posted: 10 Feb 2016 10:49 AM PST From dot-matrix to 3-D, printing technology has come a long way in 40 years. But all of these technologies have created hues by using dye inks, which can be taxing on the environment. Now a team reports the development of a colorless, non-toxic ink for use in inkjet printers. Instead of relying on dyes, the team exploits the nanostructure of this ink to create color on a page with inkjet printing. |
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