An engineer for New York Times Games has been trying to teach artificial intelligence to understand wordplay more like a human.
Your brain's capacity to strengthen and adapt doesn't decline the way we were taught, but how you use it matters enormously.
Half advice show. Half survival guide. Half absurdity-fest. (Wait, how does this work again? We're not numbers people.) Each episode, we answer all your burning questions, from how to survive a public ...
A panel of human judges decided if the model’s work matched or exceeded the output of a skilled human worker. Here's what ...
Reflections and takeaways from the LMA TWxSW general session, “Beyond the Gavel: Protecting Democracy, the Judiciary, and the Rule of Law” (October 29, 2025) ...
Occam’s razor is the principle that, all else being equal, simpler explanations should be preferred over more complex ones. This principle is thought to guide human decision-making, but the nature of ...
Irritability is a normal response to frustrations, but it can sometimes signal an underlying mental health disorder, like ...
Nous Research's open-source Nomos 1 AI model scored 87/120 on the notoriously difficult Putnam math competition, ranking ...
Math students may not blink at calculating probabilities, measuring the area beneath curves or evaluating matrices, yet they often find themselves at sea when first confronted with writing proofs.