
This article summarises research from "Tree of Thoughts: Deliberate Problem Solving with Large Language Models" by Shunyu Yao, Dian Yu, Jeffrey Zhao, Izhak Shafran, Thomas L. Griffiths, Yuan Cao, and Karthik Narasimhan.
This article summarises research from "Tree of Thoughts: Deliberate Problem Solving with Large Language Models" by Shunyu Yao, Dian Yu, Jeffrey Zhao, Izhak Shafran, Thomas L. Griffiths, Yuan Cao, and Karthik Narasimhan.
Published today in GigaScience is a new algorithm connecting social and biological networks to identify key proteins in Human Health. Researchers at Ben-Gurion University of the Negev have developed a machine-learning algorithm that could enhance our understanding of human biology and disease.
TIB, a long-standing supporter and development partner of the Public Knowledge Project, hosted the first translation sprint, more than 10,000 words were translated See the original German version in TIB’s blog The free and open source software Open Journal Systems (OJS) by the Public Knowledge Project (PKP) is a very popular workflow management software in European Open Access (OA) publishing (cf. e.g. country reports
[Author's Note: This is Version 2 of this Editorial Blog Post. Version 1 was openly reviewed through MetaROR and this version reflects changes made as a result of those reviews. The response to reviewers is here.] Academia is undergoing a rapid transformation characterized by exponential growth of scholarly outputs.
A few months back, Upstream editor Martin Fenner suggested that I submit my Upstream blog post titled, Drinking from the Firehose? Write More and Publish Less , for peer-review as a sort of experiment for Upstream through MetaROR. MetaROR, a relative newcomer to the scholarly communication community, provides the review and curate steps in the "publish-review-curate" model for meta-research.
Back in early 2012, I pondered about the relationships between a science-based blog post and a science-based journal article. This was in part induced by my discovering a blog plugin called Kcite, which allow a journal articles to be appended to the blog in the form of a numbered reference list.
Impact factor. The power of this term is unparalleled in academia. The word “impact” by itself is already so profoundly heavy. And second in line to it, would be tenure.
Two years. Hundreds of meetings. Thousands of hours. More drafts than I want to count. And now, it’s here. The final report of the National Security Commission on Emerging Biotechnology (NSCEB) is officially out in the world. It’s 180+ pages of action-oriented, bipartisan, bicameral national security-focused biotech strategy.
Rund um Technologien Künstlicher Intelligenz hat sich eine dynamische und wirtschaftsträchtige Branche entwickelt. Die Entwicklungen sind rasant, neue Rechtsfragen rund um generative KI entstehen, Gerichtsurteile werden gefällt. Mit dem Newsletter prompt/ vom iRights.Lab bleiben Sie auf dem Laufenden. Wir veröffentlichen einen aktuellen Auszug.
In terms of describing the odd mix of the present, Peter Chambers offers the formulation of ‘3SD’ - Surreal, Stubborn, Stupid + Dangerous, Destructive, Dumb. There is something quite remarkable how we seem to be threatened on the one side by incredibly stupid behaviours and decisions, and on the other side, the risk of all-powerful and all-knowing AI to rule them all.
At the end of last year, we were excited to announce our renewed commitment to community and the launch of three cross-functional programs to guide and accelerate our work.