PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Machine translation for cuneiform tablets

2023-05-02
(Press-News.org) An AI model has been developed to automatically translate Akkadian text written in cuneiform into English. Hundreds of thousands of clay tablets from ancient Mesopotamia, written in cuneiform and dating back as far as 3,400 BCE, have been found by archeologists, far more than could easily be translated by the limited number of experts who can read them. Shai Gordin and colleagues present a new machine learning model that can automatically translate Akkadian cuneiform into English. Two versions of the model were trained. One version translates the Akkadian from representations of the cuneiform signs in Latin script (transliterations). Another version of the model translates from unicode representations of the cuneiform signs. The first version, using Latin transliteration, gave more satisfactory results in this study, achieving a score of 37.47 in the Best Bilingual Evaluation Understudy 4 (BLEU4), a test of the level of correspondence between machine and human translation of the same text. The program is most effective when translating sentences of 118 or fewer characters. In some of the sentences, the program produced “hallucinations”—output that was syntactically correct in English but not accurate to the Akkadian meaning. But in the majority of cases, the translation would be usable as a first-pass at the text. The authors propose that machine translation can be used as part of a “human-machine collaboration,” in which human scholars correct and refine the models’ output. 

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Climate reasoning, prior beliefs, and partisanship

2023-05-02
A popular explanation for climate denialism is that humans will adopt beliefs that accord with their political orientation, using their cognitive abilities to explain away identity-inconsistent information in a process called “motivated reasoning.” To test this hypothesis, Bence Bago and colleagues challenged volunteers’ ability to think rationally using time pressure and cognitive loads of varying intensity. The team recruited American participants from Lucid, a website that connects academics with online survey participant pools. The authors found that people who had the ability to deliberate free of cognitive load or time ...

SwRI, UTSA researchers develop new method to synthesize antimalarial drug

SwRI, UTSA researchers develop new method to synthesize antimalarial drug
2023-05-02
SAN ANTONIO – May 2, 2023 - Southwest Research Institute (SwRI) and The University of Texas at San Antonio (UTSA) have developed a method to synthesize the highly potent antimalarial drug artemisinin, which could lead to a more cost-effective treatment for malaria. The work, recently featured on the cover of the scientific journal Organic Letters, was supported by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation as well as a grant from the Connecting through Research Partnerships (Connect) program, a joint effort by SwRI and UTSA to enhance scientific collaboration between the two institutions. In 2021, 247 million cases of malaria led to 619,000 deaths worldwide. The most effective ...

ASBMB calls for better wages and benefits for postdocs

2023-05-02
The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology sent recommendations to the National Institutes of Health on April 14 to improve working conditions for postdocs. The society recommended that the NIH: Ensure a livable wage, benefits, etc. for postdocs Require that principle investigators help postdocs craft a training plan Require that principal investigators complete mentor training programs Expand programs to create more academic staff scientist positions Collect data on postdoc career outcomes “Many of our members who run labs are struggling to recruit and retain qualified postdocs,” Sarina Neote, public affairs director ...

Cooperation benefits from peer-punishment

Cooperation benefits from peer-punishment
2023-05-02
A multi-lab replication of a 2006 study supports the role of peer sanction in promoting human cooperation. Cooperation is imperative for society to successfully solve complex problems, including climate change. One approach many groups have adopted is a system of peer sanctions for noncooperators. Such a system incurs costs to participants, who must impose the sanctions, but can allow cooperators to feel more secure that their investments in the shared project will be matched by others. A 2006 study suggested that groups with peer sanctions outgrew and outperformed groups without a peer-sanctioning institution. In light ...

Recycling of valuable metals from spent lithium ion batteries using spinning reactors

Recycling of valuable metals from spent lithium ion batteries using spinning reactors
2023-05-02
In a world that is slowly distancing itself from carbon-based energy, there has been a meteoric rise in the use of lithium-ion batteries as a next-generation energy storage solution. However, this has resulted in another problem - an increase in the amount of lithium battery waste. Lithium-ion batteries degrade slowly over their lifetime, losing anywhere from 12% to 24% of their total capacity over 500 charging and discharging cycles. The electrolyte and other materials inside the battery can also degrade, causing a decrease in capacity over time. The disposal of lithium batteries ...

PCORI offers up to $452 million through new health research funding opportunities on high-priority topics 

PCORI offers up to $452 million through new health research funding opportunities on high-priority topics 
2023-05-02
 WASHINGTON, D.C. – The Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute (PCORI) today began inviting proposals for new studies and implementation projects through nine funding opportunities. These PCORI Funding Announcements (PFAs) include four offering up to $452 million for comparative clinical effectiveness research (CER) studies comparing health care approaches to help patients and their caregivers make better-informed health choices given their particular circumstances. Additional PFAs offer funding for a range of projects that support and advance patient-centered CER and use of PCORI-funded research results.     “With ...

Could wearables capture well-being?

Could wearables capture well-being?
2023-05-02
New York, NY (May 2, 2023)—Applying machine learning models, a type of artificial intelligence (AI), to data collected passively from wearable devices can identify a patient’s degree of resilience and well-being, according to investigators at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York. The findings, reported in the May 2nd issue of JAMIA Open, support wearable devices, such as the Apple Watch®, as a way to monitor and assess psychological states remotely without requiring the completion of mental health questionnaires. The ...

High school student researchers find new brain tumor drug targets using AI

High school student researchers find new brain tumor drug targets using AI
2023-05-02
Three high school students – Andrea Olsen from Oslo, Norway; Zachary Harpaz from Boca Raton, Florida; and Chris Ren from Shanghai, China – co-authored a paper using a generative artificial intelligence (AI) engine for target discovery from Insilico Medicine (“Insilico”) called PandaOmics to identify new therapeutic targets for glioblastoma multiforme (GBM). GBM is the most aggressive and common malignant brain tumor, accounting for 16% of all primary brain tumors. The findings were published on April 26 in the journal Aging. Olsen, a student at Sevenoaks School in Kent, UK, began interning at Insilico Medicine in 2021, after discovering ...

More than 5,000 tons of toxic chemicals released from consumer products every year inside homes and workplaces

2023-05-02
People often assume that the products they use every day are safe. Now a new study by Silent Spring Institute and University of California, Berkeley exposes how much people come into contact with toxic ingredients in products, used at home and at work, that could harm their health. Findings from the analysis could help state and federal agencies strengthen chemical regulations and guide manufacturers in making safer products. Many common products like shampoos, body lotions, cleaners, mothballs, and paint removers contain toxic volatile organic compounds or VOCs—chemicals that escape as gases, accumulate in indoor air, and cause a variety of health ...

Researchers discover that the ice cap is teeming with microorganisms

Researchers discover that the ice cap is teeming with microorganisms
2023-05-02
There are no plants, and only very few animals: people rarely come here. The large glaciers in Greenland have long been perceived as ice deserts. Gigantic ice sheets where conditions for life are extremely harsh. But now, it seems, we have been wrong. There is much more life on the glaciers than we thought. Headed by Professor Alexandre Anesio, a group of researchers from the Department of Environmental Science at Aarhus University have discovered that the glaciers are teeming with life. Microbes that have adapted to ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Medication decisions in pregnancy: A balancing act

Texas Tech researcher named Station Science Leader for Antarctica project

Restricting sugar consumption in utero and in early childhood significantly reduces risk of midlife chronic disease

Apixaban vs aspirin in patients with cancer and cryptogenic stroke

Can magnetic pulses aimed at the brain treat insomnia?

F.M. Kirby Research Center honors 25 years of pioneering brain imaging research

$1.75M CDC grant funds study to boost vaccine acceptance in Arizona’s rural, border communities

Immune system review provides insight into more effective biotechnology

Remote control eddies: Upwelled nutrients boost productivity around Hawaiian Islands

Rice, Texas Medical Center institutions jointly award seed grants

Sleeping for 2: Insomnia therapy reduces postpartum depression, study shows

How fruit flies achieve accurate visual behavior despite changing light conditions

First blueprint of the human spliceosome revealed

The harmful frequency and reach of unhealthy foods on social media

Autistic traits shape how we explore

UCLA chemists just broke a 100-year-old rule and say it’s time to rewrite the textbooks

Uncovered: the molecular basis of colorful parrot plumage

Echolocating bats use acoustic mental maps to navigate long distances

Sugar rationing in early life lowers risk for chronic disease in adulthood, post-World War II data shows

Indigenous population expansion and cultural burning reduced shrub cover that fuels megafires in Australia

Echolocating bats use an acoustic cognitive map for navigation

Researchers solve medical mystery of neurological symptoms in kids

Finding a missing piece for neurodegenerative disease research

Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine ranked in global top ten medical journals

A new piece in the grass pea puzzle - updated genome sequence published

“Wearable” devices for cells

Cancer management: Stent sensor can warn of blockages in the bile duct

Nov. 14 AARP Author Q&A at GSA 2024 in Seattle: Debra Whitman, Global Aging Expert and Author of ‘The Second Fifty: Answers to the 7 Big Questions of Midlife and Beyond’

Autistic psychiatrists who don't know they're autistic may fail to spot autism in patients

New findings on animal viruses with potential to infect humans

[Press-News.org] Machine translation for cuneiform tablets