A dish of living human neurons has been taught to play Doom. No, it isn’t conscious or watching the screen the way players do. But it is learning to respond to signals in a way that produces ...
A collaboration between Carnegie Mellon University’s CREATE Lab, the STEM Coding Lab and the Valley School of Ligonier will teach elementary students about AI’s ethical and societal implications.
At Bryn Mawr College, undergraduate students, in partnership with faculty, learn to ask bold questions; to forge a work ethic grounded not only in persistence but also integrity and humanity; and to ...
Tools designed to verify and monitor physical AI systems offer value, but human oversight is needed to prevent accidents and unexpected behavior.
Seventeen-year-old Vishnu Kannan’s love for math and problem solving led him to become the founder of a tech startup, which he recently sold for $2 million in stocks.
Three faculty members from Johns Hopkins University have been named 2026 Sloan Research Fellows by the Alfred P. Sloan ...
After training neurons to play Pong, the team is back, and this time the brain cells are slaying demons with super shotguns.
More than three years after ChatGPT debuted, AI has become a part of everyday life — and professors and students are still ...
John Chowning '66 D.M.A. reflects on his career, his musical journey and the inventions that led to his 2026 win at the ...
Researchers have demonstrated that human brain cells can play DOOM, showcasing a major breakthrough in the advancements of wetware technology.
Living human neurons were trained to play Doom, extending the long-running engineering benchmark into biological computing.