Humans can ‘feel’ hidden objects under sand from 2.76 inches away, revealing the surprising power of remote touch.
The CosmicWatch device costs only $100 to make, making it accessible for both high school students and spacecraft operators.
Abstract: Object detection has achieved a promising development in recent years and played an important role in various applications. However, the performance of object detection networks generally ...
Cancer imaging is entering a phase where malignant cells no longer hide in murky grayscale but flare into view with surgical precision. Across operating rooms, scanners, and even blood tests, ...
Generative artificial intelligence has set off a tremendous amount of excitement, speculation, and anxiety thanks to its ability to convincingly mimic human work, including human writing. Although a ...
Abstract: Traditional 3D object detectors, whether fully-, semi-, or weakly-supervised, rely heavily on extensive human annotations. In contrast, this paper introduces an unsupervised 3D object ...
T.J. Thomson receives funding from the Australian Research Council. He is an affiliate with the ARC Centre of Excellence for Automated Decision Making & Society. Aaron J. Snoswell receives research ...
Here’s what you’ll learn when you read this story: Object Arjuna 2025 PN7 was thought to be a meteorite in an Earthlike orbit, but that is now being questioned. The new hypothesis suggests that 2025 ...
Why would you want to detect metal? Oh, I don't know … maybe you want to find some gold in the ground. You could dig up ALL the dirt, or you could find the location that has the gold before you dig.
Armed police handcuffed and searched a student at a high school in Baltimore County, Maryland, this week after an AI-driven security system flagged the teen’s empty bag of chips as a possible firearm.