
Haley Moreland
Articles
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Sep 10, 2024 |
triblive.com | Tanya Babbar |Amani Clark-Bey |Giustino Racchini |Megan Trotter |Haley Moreland
This story was not written using artificial intelligence, but it could have been. Although the technology might have sped up the writing process, the quality of the information — and the trust the reader has in it — likely would have suffered. Use of AI in the news industry, so far, largely is restricted to research, making stories more searchable online and compiling data from the internet.
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Sep 9, 2024 |
triblive.com | Megan Trotter |Haley Moreland
Emily Schneider uses artificial intelligence at work for six hours a day, twice a week. As a physician assistant at West Penn Hospital, it’s her job to operate Vectra, a 3D imaging system intended to capture signs of skin disease. The algorithm the machine uses is an example of artificial intelligence at work. It uses a vast database of information and applies it to each photograph, identifying potential problems far faster than any human could.
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Sep 7, 2024 |
triblive.com | Megan Trotter |Haley Moreland |Dinari Clacks
Pittsburgh may not be the birthplace of AI, but it served as a cradle. And the technology is older than you probably think. Carnegie Mellon University is one of the places where AI was being developed more than 50 years ago. Tom Mitchell, who has taught at Carnegie Mellon since 1986 and led the university’s Machine Learning Department for the first 10 years of its operation, said AI has been around longer than people realize.
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Sep 7, 2024 |
triblive.com | Megan Trotter |Dinari Clacks |Haley Moreland
The breakneck pace of advancements in artificial intelligence development has led to the technology touching seemingly every facet of life, from work to finances to health care. That rapid growth and unchecked development have created as much anxiety as hope, from Wall Street to the White House. But while AI is becoming ubiquitous, it isn’t going to replace the human brain anytime soon, according to most experts.
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Aug 19, 2024 |
thenation.com | Nausheen Husain |Aly Panjwani |Haley Moreland
Warning: Invalid argument supplied for foreach() in /code/wp-content/themes/thenation-2023/inc/single_article_functions.php on line 783Two secretive prison units that used to almost exclusively house people said to be connected to terrorism have expanded by nearly 80 percent in 15 years, and a new unit is on the way. Formerly incarcerated people say they have been used to punish dissent.
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