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Events

Upcoming Events

  • photo of Bruno Olshausen

    Quest | CBMM Seminar Series - Bruno Olshausen

    Date: May 7, 2024 | 4pm EST
    Location: Singleton Auditorium, Building 46
    The goal of building machines that can perceive and act in the world as humans and other animals do has been a focus of AI research efforts for over half a century. Over this same period, neuroscience has sought to achieve a mechanistic understanding of the brain processes underlying perception and action. It stands to reason that these parallel efforts could inform one another. However recent advances in deep learning and transformers have, for the most part, not translated into new neuroscientific insights; and other than deriving loose inspiration from neuroscience, AI has mostly pursued its own course which now deviates strongly from the brain.
  • child playing with building blocks

    Mission Update - The Development of Intelligent Minds

    Date: May 14, 2024 | 4pm EST
    Location: Quest Conference Room, 45-792
    This research mission broadly aims to understand how children grasp new concepts from few examples, how children build upon layers of concepts to reach an understanding of the world and have the flexibility to solve an unbounded range of problems. Can we build AI that starts like a baby and learns like a child?
  • UROP Research Blitz

    Date: May 15, 2024 | 12:00PM EST
    Location: Quest Conference Room, 45-322
    Join us on May 15th at 12PM to help celebrate our UROPS and learn about the work they’ve been doing this semester. Presenters include: Yicheng Huang, Ananya Kulshrestha, Kevin Chen and Yi Xie

Past Events

  • Mission Update - Embodied Intelligence

    Date: April 9, 2024 | 4pm EST
    Location: SCC Conference Room, 45-792
    The presentation will begin with short introductions to the question from the artificial and natural intelligence perspectives. Then it will dig a bit into three research results: a Bayesian approach to 3D perception, a method for efficient planning under the resulting uncertainty over world models, and a study of the role of spatial cognition in human behavior in a VR object-search task. The presentation will conclude with a discussion. 
  • photo of Melanie Mitchel

    Quest | CBMM Seminar Series - Melanie Mitchell

    Date: April 2, 2024 | 4pm EST
    Location: Singleton Auditorium, Building 46
    Mitchell will survey a current, heated debate in the AI research community on whether large pre-trained language models "understand" language—and the physical and social situations language encodes—in any important sense. She will describe arguments for and against such understanding and, more generally, will discuss methods to evaluate understanding and intelligence in AI systems.
  • photo of Giorgio Metta

    Quest | CBMM Seminar Series - Giorgio Metta

    Date: March 26, 2024 | 4pm EST
    Location: Singleton Auditorium, Building 46
    The iCub is a humanoid robot designed to support research in embodied AI. At 104 cm tall, the iCub is the size of a five-year-old child, and can crawl on all fours, walk, and sit up. Its hands support sophisticated manipulation skills. The iCub is distributed as Open Source following the GPL licenses. More than 50 robots have been built so far which are available in laboratories across Europe, US, Korea, Singapore, and Japan.