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

AI in engineering

2025-03-11
(Press-News.org) A review explores the role of AI in engineering, assessing the benefits and challenges of the synergy between the two fields. A 2004 DARPA contest pitted AI vehicles against one another in a race on 150 miles of dirt roads. The best-performing vehicle made it less than eight miles of the way. The next year, five vehicles finished a 132-mile course, and today driverless cabs are active in several major cities. Enthusiasts have suggested AI could improve transportation and manufacturing, medicine, consumer goods, and military technology. Rama Chellappa, Guru Madhavan, Ed Schlesinger, and John Anderson assess those claims by exploring several case studies, including autonomous cars and planes, AI-assisted surgery, AI-guided closed loop anesthesiology, AI and robotics, and AI-assisted discovery of new materials. Among the questions the authors raise: should AI vehicles be fully autonomous if more accidents occur when humans are in control? Who will get left behind as AI remakes the world economy? The authors discuss weaknesses in data-driven models, such as domain shift, lack of robustness to adversarial attacks, bias in decision-making, and lack of explainability—along with issues of safety, privacy, bias, and other ethical and governance issues. As we enter an era of machines that can sense, learn, and make decisions without human supervision, the authors call for research into appropriate regulatory frameworks to address questions of safety, liability, and governance of engineered AI systems.

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Dr. Megan Abbott and the University of Colorado awarded $450,000 establishing a Clinical Research Center of Excellence that will also serve as a second site for SYNGAP1 ProMMiS

Dr. Megan Abbott and the University of Colorado awarded $450,000 establishing a Clinical Research Center of Excellence that will also serve as a second site for SYNGAP1 ProMMiS
2025-03-11
Mill Valley, CA – March 11, 2025 – The SynGAP Research Fund (SRF) dba Cure SYNGAP1, a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization, has awarded a $450,000 grant to Dr. Megan Abbott and the University of Colorado to establish a Clinical Research Center of Excellence for SYNGAP1-Related Disorders at Children’s Hospital Colorado (CHCO). This initiative expands the already established Natural History Study to the SYNGAP1 Prospective Multidisciplinary Multisite Study (ProMMiS) while providing specialized care for individuals affected by SYNGAP1-related disorders ...

Empire Discovery Institute appoints Dr. Ronald Newbold as Chief Executive Officer

2025-03-11
Rochester, NY – March 10, 2025 – Empire Discovery Institute (EDI), a leading non-profit drug discovery and development accelerator, is pleased to announce the appointment of Dr. Ronald Newbold as Chief Executive Officer (CEO). Dr. Newbold, who joined EDI in 2021 as Chief Business Officer, has served as interim CEO since August 2022 and has been instrumental in driving the organization’s growth and success. Under his leadership, EDI has achieved significant milestones, including the growth of the Medicines Discovery ...

Douglas Hanahan, Ph.D., FAACR, honored with the 2025 Pezcoller Foundation-AACR International Award for Extraordinary Achievement in Cancer Research

2025-03-11
CHICAGO – The Pezcoller Foundation-American Association for Cancer Research (AACR) International Award for Extraordinary Achievement in Cancer Research will be presented to Douglas Hanahan, PhD, Fellow of the AACR Academy, during the AACR Annual Meeting 2025, to be held April 25-30 at the McCormick Place Convention Center in Chicago, Illinois. Hanahan is the Ludwig Distinguished Scholar at the Lausanne Branch of the Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research. He is being recognized for his fundamental discoveries in cancer research that have had a far-reaching translational impact. Through the generation and characterization of innovative mouse models, Hanahan defined multistep ...

Mapping DNA's hidden switches: A methylation atlas

2025-03-11
Researchers have developed a comprehensive atlas that maps DNA methylation—a critical chemical modification governing gene activity—across 39 human cell types, revealing a complex landscape of epigenetic regulation. The study identified over 34,000 genomic regions exhibiting distinct ON/OFF methylation patterns at the two copies of the genome we inherited from our parents, a phenomenon known as allele-specific methylation. Some of these methylation changes are caused by genetic differences in genomic sequence of DNA, while others are due to parental imprinting—a ...

Beneficial genetic changes observed in regular blood donors

Beneficial genetic changes observed in regular blood donors
2025-03-11
Researchers at the Francis Crick Institute have identified genetic changes in blood stem cells from frequent blood donors that support the production of new, non-cancerous cells. Understanding the differences in the mutations that accumulate in our blood stem cells as we age is important to understand how and why blood cancers develop and hopefully how to intervene before the onset of clinical symptoms. As we age, stem cells in the bone marrow naturally accumulate mutations and with this, we see the emergence of clones, which are groups of blood cells ...

New research reveals psychological ‘booster shots’ can strengthen resistance to misinformation over time

2025-03-11
A new study has found that targeted psychological interventions can significantly enhance long-term resistance to misinformation. Dubbed “psychological booster shots,” these interventions improve memory retention and help individuals recognize and resist misleading information more effectively over time. The study, published in Nature Communications, explores how different approaches, including text-based messages, videos, and online games, can inoculate people against misinformation. The researchers from the Universities of Oxford, Cambridge, Bristol, Potsdam and King’s College London conducted five large-scale experiments with over ...

Arctic sea ice loss drives drier weather over California and wetter over Spain and Portugal

2025-03-11
A study led by researchers from the Barcelona Institute for Global Health (ISGlobal), a centre supported by the "la Caixa" Foundation, has used a novel approach to unravel the influence of the loss of Arctic sea ice on the planet's climate, isolating it from other factors related to climate change. The study, published in the journal Communications Earth and Environment, shows that on decadal timescales, the loss of Arctic ice favours the climate of the south-west of the United States - and California in particular - becoming drier on average, especially in winter. This phenomenon would also affect ...

Nwd1 gene deletion triggers MASH-like pathology in mice: a new scientific breakthrough

Nwd1 gene deletion triggers MASH-like pathology in mice: a new scientific breakthrough
2025-03-11
Metabolic dysfunction-associated steatohepatitis (MASH) is a liver disease that progresses without symptoms and is associated with significant global public health concerns. It is prevalent in 30% of the population worldwide and poses a risk of advancing to cirrhosis and liver cancer. MASH is marked by lipid droplet accumulation in the liver, progressing from steatosis to inflammation and cell damage, ultimately leading to fibrosis, cirrhosis, and hepatocellular carcinoma. A clear understanding of cellular processes in MASH pathogenesis is essential for developing ...

First burials: Neanderthal and Homo sapiens interactions in the Mid-Middle Palaeolithic Levant

First burials: Neanderthal and Homo sapiens interactions in the Mid-Middle Palaeolithic Levant
2025-03-11
The first-ever published research on Tinshemet Cave reveals that Neanderthals and Homo sapiens in the mid-Middle Paleolithic Levant not only coexisted but actively interacted, sharing technology, lifestyles, and burial customs. These interactions fostered cultural exchange, social complexity, and behavioral innovations, such as formal burial practices and the symbolic use of ochre for decoration. The findings suggest that human connections, rather than isolation, were key drivers of technological and cultural advancements, highlighting the Levant as a crucial crossroads in early human history. Link to the images: https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/19p__omKCSSPkGBI3b8beF1QXqeRahGk1?usp=drive_link ...

Machine learning models fail to detect key health deteriorations, Virginia Tech research shows

Machine learning models fail to detect key health deteriorations, Virginia Tech research shows
2025-03-11
xIt would be greatly beneficial to physicians trying to save lives in intensive care units if they could be alerted when a patient’s condition rapidly deteriorates or shows vitals in highly abnormal ranges. While current machine learning models are attempting to achieve that goal, a Virginia Tech study recently published in Communications Medicine shows that they are falling short with models for in-hospital mortality prediction, which refers to predicting the likelihood of a patient dying in the hospital, failing to recognize ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Wiley to expand Advanced Portfolio

Invisible battery parts finally seen with pioneering technique

Tropical forests generate rainfall worth billions, study finds

A yeast enzyme helps human cells overcome mitochondrial defects

Bacteria frozen in ancient underground ice cave found to be resistant against 10 modern antibiotics

Rhododendron-derived drugs now made by bacteria

Admissions for child maltreatment decreased during first phase of COVID-19 pandemic, but ICU admissions increased later

Power in motion: transforming energy harvesting with gyroscopes

Ketamine high NOT related to treatment success for people with alcohol problems, study finds

1 in 6 Medicare beneficiaries depend on telehealth for key medical care

Maps can encourage home radon testing in the right settings

Exploring the link between hearing loss and cognitive decline

Machine learning tool can predict serious transplant complications months earlier

Prevalence of over-the-counter and prescription medication use in the US

US child mental health care need, unmet needs, and difficulty accessing services

Incidental rotator cuff abnormalities on magnetic resonance imaging

Sensing local fibers in pancreatic tumors, cancer cells ‘choose’ to either grow or tolerate treatment

Barriers to mental health care leave many children behind, new data cautions

Cancer and inflammation: immunologic interplay, translational advances, and clinical strategies

Bioactive polyphenolic compounds and in vitro anti-degenerative property-based pharmacological propensities of some promising germplasms of Amaranthus hypochondriacus L.

AI-powered companionship: PolyU interfaculty scholar harnesses music and empathetic speech in robots to combat loneliness

Antarctica sits above Earth’s strongest “gravity hole.” Now we know how it got that way

Haircare products made with botanicals protects strands, adds shine

Enhanced pulmonary nodule detection and classification using artificial intelligence on LIDC-IDRI data

Using NBA, study finds that pay differences among top performers can erode cooperation

Korea University, Stanford University, and IESGA launch Water Sustainability Index to combat ESG greenwashing

Molecular glue discovery: large scale instead of lucky strike

Insulin resistance predictor highlights cancer connection

Explaining next-generation solar cells

Slippery ions create a smoother path to blue energy

[Press-News.org] AI in engineering