Friday, September 19, 2025
Did OpenAI just solve hallucinations? - Matthew Berman, YouTube
Sam Altman says that bots are making social media feel ‘fake’ - Julie Bort, Tech Crunch
He then live-analyzed his reasoning. “I think there are a bunch of things going on: real people have picked up quirks of LLM-speak, the Extremely Online crowd drifts together in very correlated ways, the hype cycle has a very ‘it’s so over/we’re so back’ extremism, optimization pressure from social platforms on juicing engagement and the related way that creator monetization works, other companies have astroturfed us so i’m extra sensitive to it, and a bunch more (including probably some bots).” To decode that a little, he’s accusing humans of starting to sound like LLMs, even though LLMs — spearheaded by OpenAI — were literally invented to mimic human communication, right down to the em dash.
https://techcrunch.com/2025/09/08/sam-altman-says-that-bots-are-making-social-media-feel-fake/
Thursday, September 18, 2025
AI Teaching Learners Today: Pick Your Pedagogy! - Ray Schroeder, Inside Higher Ed
How should universities teach leadership now that teams include humans and autonomous AI agents? - Alex Zarifis, Times Higher Education
Wednesday, September 17, 2025
Georgia Tech’s Jill Watson Outperforms ChatGPT in Real Classrooms - Georgia Institute of Technology
OPINION: AI can be a great equalizer, but it remains out of reach for millions of Americans; we cannot let that continue - Erin Mote, Hechinger Report
Tuesday, September 16, 2025
AI for Next Generation Science Education - Xiaoming Zhai, Georgia Tech
Tech leadership is business leadership - McKinsey
Monday, September 15, 2025
Duke University pilot project examining pros and cons of using artificial intelligence in college - AP
Anthropic Agrees to Pay Authors at Least $1.5 Billion in AI Copyright Settlement - Kate Knibbs, Wired
Sunday, September 14, 2025
Should AI Get Legal Rights? - Kylie Robeson, Wired
Responsible AI in higher education: Building skills, trust and integrity - Alexander Shevchenko, World Economic Forum
Saturday, September 13, 2025
Why liberal arts schools are now hopping on skills-based microcredentials - Alcino Donadel, University Business
New market demands are pushing small, four-year liberal arts colleges to offer microcredentials, indicating growing momentum across sectors of higher education to elevate workforce readiness within their academic offerings. Chief learning officers at community colleges are leading the charge in expanding non-degree offerings, reporting the highest levels of institutional investment in this area. Meanwhile, large research universities—like the University of Colorado Boulder and the University of Tennessee at Knoxville—are catching up. However, strict faculty governance and curriculum processes and different accreditation standards have caused some liberal arts schools to lag, says Mike Simmons, an associate executive director at the American Association of Collegiate Registrars and Admissions Officers.
Academics must be open to changing their minds on acceptable AI use - Ava Doherty, Times Higher Education
Friday, September 12, 2025
Navigating the AI Revolution in Higher Education - Alyse Jordan, Frontiers in Education
A systematic review conducted in the first nine months following ChatGPT's release provides valuable early insights into how AI has affected teaching, curriculum design, and assessment practices in higher education. The review identified both benefits and threats of AI integration, offering preliminary evidence to inform institutional policies and faculty practices (Liang et al., 2025). As the authors note, this represents "a first wave" of research, acknowledging how quickly AI systems are evolving and changing educational landscapes.Additionally, in specialized fields such as Mechanical Engineering Education (MEE), AI integration demonstrates unique applications and challenges. Research shows that AI significantly enhances learning experiences through technologies like computer-aided translation and natural language processing, making education more accessible and interactive.
https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/education/articles/10.3389/feduc.2025.1682901/abstract
Research: Teachers now outpace students in K12 AI use - Matt Zalaznick, University Business
Thursday, September 11, 2025
Insights on today’s labor market: Uncertainty, agentic AI, and more - McKinsey
Getting Ahead of EU AI Literacy Requirements – How Businesses Can Stay Compliant and Competitive - Jonathan Armstrong, European Business Review
Wednesday, September 10, 2025
The future of work is agentic - McKinsey
Seizing the agentic AI advantage - McKinsey
Tuesday, September 09, 2025
Ep. 11 AGI and the Future of Higher Ed: Talking with Ray Schroeder - Unfixed: How AI is Reshaping Higher Education with Nick Janos and Zach Justus, Podcast
Artificial Intelligence: Three top experts share advice on how to implement AI tools into your business today — Executive Insights, Louisville Business First
Monday, September 08, 2025
San José Completes First City-Led AI Startup Grants - Scarlett Evans, AI Business
Google's New Universal Translator AI is FREE & More AI Use Cases - The AI Advantage, YouTube
Sunday, September 07, 2025
How AI Is Changing—Not ‘Killing’—College - Colleen Flaherty, Inside Higher Ed
New AI-powered live translation and language learning tools in Google Translate - Matt Sheets, Google Keyword
Saturday, September 06, 2025
Mass Intelligence: From GPT-5 to nano banana: everyone is getting access to powerful AI - Ethan Mollick, One Useful Thing
Why did the CSU spend millions on ChatGPT amid a budget crisis? We asked school leaders - Julia Barajas, LAist
Friday, September 05, 2025
China Is Building a Brain-Computer Interface Industry - Emily Mullen, Wired
Here are 4 pain points amid the new normal of online learning - Alcino Donadel, University Business
Thursday, September 04, 2025
Teaching Online Podcast - Tom Cavanagh and Kelvin Thompson, University of Central Florida
Episode 193. Guests Ray Schroeder and Dr. Melissa Vito unpack decades of practical wisdom on leadership vision in conversation with hosts Tom and Kelvin. This episode is the first in a mini-series of “pillar panels” offering distilled insights from esteemed community members on key, “structural support” topics essential in the future of strategic online/digital education. This episode includes links and reflections synthesizing the advent and growth of online learning.
Opinion: Cutting Through the Hype for GenAI in Higher Educationv - Stephan Geering, GovTech
Wednesday, September 03, 2025
AI Companies Roll Out Educational Tools - Ray Schroeder, Inside Higher Ed
AI Is Eliminating Jobs for Younger Workers - Will Knight, Wired
Tuesday, September 02, 2025
Taking AI Welfare Seriously - Robert Long, et al; arXiv
Microsoft AI CEO Warns "Seemingly Conscious AI is Coming" - Wes Roth, YouTube
Monday, September 01, 2025
ChatGPT-5 Gets Warmer, Friendlier Update - Scarlett Evans, AI Business
How to remain resilient, focused, and effective in uncertain times - McKinsey
Disruption isn’t an occasional hurdle; it’s the new normal. According to McKinsey research, 84 percent of leaders report feeling underprepared for future disruptions, with geopolitical tensions topping the list of concerns. Leaders today are called to steer through shifting trade policies, international conflict, and internal organizational pressures—all while keeping their people engaged and their strategies on track. McKinsey’s Ida Kristensen and coauthors outline four dimensions of resilience that can help organizations stay grounded and agile when the path ahead is unclear:
Sunday, August 31, 2025
A ‘Great Defection’ threatens to empty universities and colleges of top teaching talent - Jon Marcus, Hechinger Report
Anthropic’s Higher Ed AI Board Signals Shift From Tools To Guardrails - Dan Fitzpatrick, Forbes
Today, the company behind the AI chatbot Claude announced two initiatives designed to shape how institutions adopt AI. The first is the creation of a Higher Education Advisory Board made up of distinguished academic leaders. The second is the launch of three new AI Fluency courses aimed at both students and faculty. The moves underscore Anthropic’s dual strategy to influence policy through academic leadership while providing practical tools to accelerate adoption. Anthropic was founded in 2021 by former OpenAI employees and is known for its “safety-first” approach to AI. Its foray into education seems to reflect this ethos. “The choices made in the next few years about how AI enters the classroom will shape a generation’s relationship with both technology and learning,” the company said in its announcement.
Saturday, August 30, 2025
More Schools Are Considering Education-Focused AI Tools. What’s the Best Way to Use Them? - Lauren Coffey, EdSurge
Torney recommends institutions set guardrails early to use these tools, based on the goals they hope to achieve. “My main takeaway is that this is not a go-it-alone technology,” he says. “If you're a school leader and you as a staff haven't had a conversation on how to use these things and what they’re good at and not good at, that’s where you get into these potential dangers.” Paul Shovlin, an AI faculty fellow at the Center for Teaching and Learning at Ohio University, says the K-12 sector seems to have adopted the new tools at a quicker pace than its higher education counterparts.
College students, educators worldwide begin fall semester using Elon University’s Student Guide to Artificial Intelligence - Elon University
Friday, August 29, 2025
Reconfiguring work: Change management in the age of gen AI - Erik Roth, McKinsey
There are no entry-level jobs anymore. What now? - Dana Stephenson, the Hill
Thursday, August 28, 2025
The Radical Changes AI Is Bringing To Higher Education - Nick Ladany, Forbes
We must build AI for people; not to be a person: Seemingly Conscious AI is Coming - Mustafa Suleyman, Mustafa-Suleyman.ai
Wednesday, August 27, 2025
Ex-Google exec says degrees in law and medicine are a waste of time because they take so long to complete that AI will catch up by graduation - Preston Fore, Fortune
At one elite college, over 80% of students now use AI – but it’s not all about outsourcing their work - Germán Reyes, Middlebury, The Conversation
Over 80% of Middlebury College students use generative AI for coursework, according to a recent survey I conducted with my colleague and fellow economist Zara Contractor. This is one of the fastest technology adoption rates on record, far outpacing the 40% adoption rate among U.S. adults, and it happened in less than two years after ChatGPT’s public launch. What we found challenges the panic-driven narrative around AI in higher education and instead suggests that institutional policy should focus on how AI is used, not whether it should be banned.
Tuesday, August 26, 2025
AI is already displacing these jobs - Madison Mills, Axios
Smarter Support: How to Use AI in Online Courses and Teach Your Students to Use It Too - Joel Greene, Faculty Focus
Whether we were ready or not, AI is in the room. And if you’re teaching online, you’ve probably already seen it at work in discussion posts, essays, or that strangely perfect email. Instead of panicking or pretending it’s not happening, we’ve got a better option. We can help students learn how to use AI responsibly, because it’s not going away. Honestly, some of them are relying on it more than we realize (Colvard 2024). If you’re going to teach with AI, you’ve got to know what it can (and can’t) do. I’m talking about tools like ChatGPT, Grammarly, QuillBot, or even Microsoft Copilot. Give yourself a little “playtime” with them. Open one up and ask it to write a discussion post. Then see what it gets right and what falls flat.
Monday, August 25, 2025
'This stuff is moving so quickly': Utah Tech leaders discuss AI, unveil new cybersecurity degree - Nick Fiala, St. George News / KSL
Does GenAI provide the opportunity for creativity to take centre stage? - Ioannis Glinavos, Times Higher Education
For centuries, universities have delivered scarce expertise. We stacked programmes like layer cakes: first theory, then practice, finally – if there was time – a sprinkle of creativity. Generative AI flips that order. Because routine skills are on tap, the bottleneck shifts upstream to ideation: spotting problems worth solving and framing them so the machine can help.
How should assessors use AI for marking and feedback?
An insider’s guide to how students use GenAI tools
Three reasons to harness AI for interdisciplinary collaboration
That demands divergent thinking, curiosity and ethical judgement – qualities our assessment regimes often squeeze out. We need to treat creativity as a core literacy, not a decorative extra. Don’t get me wrong, skills are not irrelevant – they just look different. Prompt craft, data stewardship and model critique replace manual citation and calculator drills. But they are means, not ends.
Sunday, August 24, 2025
AI’s Rapid Integration into Higher Education Transforming Student Experiences and Faculty Challenges - SSB Crack News
A scaffolded approach to teaching with GenAI - Rena Beatrice Alcalay, Times Higher Education
As GenAI continues to reshape higher education, this four-phase framework by Rena Beatrice Alcalay offers educators ways to guide students to use these tools critically and ethically, fostering agency, bias awareness and deeper engagement in philosophical writing assignments. This pedagogical stance emphasises agency: students learn to critically assess what to include or exclude from AI-generated suggestions and to distinguish between factual repetition and genuine conceptual development. At the heart of this approach is a commitment to helping students articulate ideas that reflect their values, a central goal in philosophy education.
Saturday, August 23, 2025
Claude Opus 4 and 4.1 can now end a rare subset of conversations - Anthropic
We recently gave Claude Opus 4 and 4.1 the ability to end conversations in our consumer chat interfaces. This ability is intended for use in rare, extreme cases of persistently harmful or abusive user interactions. This feature was developed primarily as part of our exploratory work on potential AI welfare, though it has broader relevance to model alignment and safeguards. In pre-deployment testing of Claude Opus 4, we included a preliminary model welfare assessment. As part of that assessment, we investigated Claude’s self-reported and behavioral preferences, and found a robust and consistent aversion to harm. This included, for example, requests from users for sexual content involving minors and attempts to solicit information that would enable large-scale violence or acts of terror. Claude Opus 4 showed:
AI Is Designing Bizarre New Physics Experiments That Actually Work - Anil Ananthaswamy, Wired
Friday, August 22, 2025
Sam Altman, OpenAI will reportedly back a startup that takes on Musk’s Neuralink - Julie Bort, Tech Crunch
Google Pledges $1 Billion to Bring AI Training and Tools to US Colleges - CDO Magazine
Google has committed $1 billion over the next three years to equip U.S. higher education institutions and nonprofits with artificial intelligence training, research resources, and advanced tools. More than 100 universities, including major public systems like Texas A&M and the University of North Carolina, have already joined the initiative. Participating schools may receive direct funding, cloud computing credits, and free access to Google’s advanced Gemini chatbot for students. The investment—which covers both cash support and the value of Google’s paid AI services—aims to eventually reach every accredited nonprofit college in the U.S., with similar programs under discussion abroad, Senior Vice President James Manyika said.
Thursday, August 21, 2025
MIT's new AI can teach itself to control robots by watching the world through their eyes — it only needs a single camera News - Tristan Greene, Live Science
Scientists at MIT have developed a novel vision-based artificial intelligence (AI) system that can teach itself how to control virtually any robot without the use of sensors or pretraining. The system gathers data about a given robot’s architecture using cameras, in much the same way that humans use their eyes to learn about themselves as they move. This allows the AI controller to develop a self-learning model for operating any robot — essentially giving machines a humanlike sense of physical self-awareness.
Gemini just got two of ChatGPT's best features - and they're free - Sabrina Ortiz, ZDnet
Wednesday, August 20, 2025
Indiana U to Launch GenAI 101 Course for Students, Staff - Ashley Mowreader, Inside Higher Ed
Artificial Intelligence Literacy in Higher Education: Theory and Practice from a European Perspective - Imre Fekete, JSTOR
Tuesday, August 19, 2025
Goodbye, $165,000 Tech Jobs. Student Coders Seek Work at Chipotle. - Natasha Singer, NY Times
Sydney Uni students will use ChatGPT, so let’s teach them how - Adam Bridgeman and Danny Liu, Financial Review
We now have a “two-lane approach” to assessments. Lane 1 assessments are secure and measure students’ capabilities in live, in-person environments, such as interactive oral assessments, Q&As or demonstrations, skills observations or, yes, sometimes exams. When these assessments are well-designed and executed, with AI use reliably controlled, they safeguard academic integrity and measure whether learning has happened. We’ll also have “open” lane 2 assessments that allow the use of all available and relevant tools, including generative AI. In these assessments, we have essentially banned the banning of AI because (apart from the fact that restricting AI is unenforceable when students are not in front of us) we want to ensure our students can learn, prosper and contribute in the contemporary business and wider world. We’ll assume students are using AI, and they won’t get in trouble for doing so in open lane 2 assessments, as long as they acknowledge how they’ve used it.
Monday, August 18, 2025
Why Faculty Hold The Keys To Higher Ed’s AI Digital Transformation - Aviva Legatt, Forbes
10 Things GPT-5 Changes - The AI Daily Brief
10 Things GPT-5 Changes - The AI Daily Brief
In the podcast "10 Things GPT-5 Changes," the host discusses the significant impact of the GPT-5 model on the AI landscape, focusing on ten key areas of change. The video emphasizes a shift from raw AI capabilities to how these models interact with the real world through tools. It also highlights a potential plateau in the current pre-training paradigm, with future advancements focusing on reasoning and new scaling approaches. The podcast suggests that GPT-5 will empower the average user by making advanced AI more accessible and reducing the need for users to select specific models. Other key takeaways include the rise of "vibe coding," where non-developers can generate code, and the increasing consumerization of OpenAI's products. The video also touches upon the competitive landscape, with opportunities for other AI labs to emerge, and the growing importance of the "app layer" and multi-agent systems in the future of AI. [summary provided in part by Gemini 2.5 Pro]
Sunday, August 17, 2025
4 Steps to Responsible AI Implementation in Education - Rhea Kelly, THE Journal
How AI Supports Student Mental Health in Higher Education - Erin Brereton, EdTech
Students’ awareness of campus mental health services has grown in recent years, according to research from the Steve Fund, a nonprofit organization dedicated to supporting the emotional well-being of young people of color. Yet, taking advantage of these resources isn’t always easy, as 40% of college students say they’ve found it challenging to access mental health services. In a separate survey conducted by EDUCAUSE, students mentioned that even though their school has introduced additional technology-driven care options, they still face long wait times, says researcher Nicole Muscanell, who co-authored the 2025 EDUCAUSE Students and Technology Report.
Saturday, August 16, 2025
The Precision Learning Companion - There Is An AI For That (TAAFT) Notion Site
OpenAI, Google and Anthropic Win US Approval for Civilian AI Contracts - Bloomberg
Friday, August 15, 2025
Google Releases Most Realistic AI World Model to Date - Scarlett Evans, AI Business
The Genie 3 model is said to be Google’s most realistic to date, generating lifelike training simulations for robots and AI agents. Google has launched a new AI model that lets robots and AI systems interact with and learn from realistic simulations of the world. Genie 3 is a general purpose model that Google says is a significant step towards achieving artificial general intelligence, meaning a stage where AI can carry out tasks at the same level as humans. Unlike previous AI systems that focused on narrow tasks, Genie 3 simulates entire environments for training autonomous robots and vehicles.
These College Professors Will Not Bow Down to A.I. - Jessica Grose, NY Times
Thursday, August 14, 2025
Self-adaptive reasoning for science - Newman Cheng, et al; Microsoft
Unlocking self-adaptive cognitive behavior that is more controllable and explainable than reasoning models in challenging scientific domains. Long-running LLM agents equipped with strong reasoning, planning, and execution skills have the potential to transform scientific discovery with high-impact advancements, such as developing new materials or pharmaceuticals. As these agents become more autonomous, ensuring effective human oversight and clear accountability becomes increasingly important, presenting challenges that must be addressed to unlock their full transformative power. Today’s approaches to long-term reasoning are established during the post-training phase, prior to end-user deployment and typically by the model provider. As a result, the expected actions of these agents are pre-baked by the model developer, offering little to no control from the end user.
https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/research/blog/self-adaptive-reasoning-for-science/
Bringing the best of AI to college students for free - Sundar Pichai, The Google Keyword Blog
- Expanded access to Gemini 2.5 Pro: Ask any question and upload images. Our most capable model provides quick homework and writing help.
- Deep Research: Save time with custom research reports, providing in-depth information from hundreds of sites across the web with higher access to Deep Research on 2.5 Pro.
- NotebookLM: A one-of-a-kind thinking companion that helps you organize your thoughts, now with five times more audio and video overviews.
- Veo 3: Transform text or a photo into a 8-second video with sound using Veo 3
- Higher limits when using Jules, our asynchronous AI coding agent that can fix bugs and build new features for your coding projects.
- 2 TB of storage: tons of space for all your notes, projects, photos and papers on Google Photos, Drive and Gmail
- https://blog.google/products/gemini/google-ai-pro-students-learning/
Wednesday, August 13, 2025
OpenAI Announces Massive US Government Partnership - Joe Schiffer and Will Knight, Wired
AI Skills Needed in Many Postgrad Careers—Not Just Tech - Ashley Mowreader, Inside Higher Ed
Tuesday, August 12, 2025
U.S. Continuing Education Market to Surpass USD 95.98 Billion by 2030, Growing at 6.2% CAGR as AI and Micro-Credentials Reshape Learning - Arizton, the Globe and Mail
According to Arizton’s latest report, the U.S. continuing education market is projected to grow from USD 66.91 billion in 2024 to USD 95.98 billion by 2030, expanding at a CAGR of 6.20% during the forecast period. The continuing education market is accelerating its digital transformation as AI becomes a core growth catalyst. Providers are adopting Intelligent Tutoring Systems (ITS), adaptive learning platforms, and real-time analytics to deliver personalized, flexible, and scalable upskilling solutions. This shift aligns with surging global demand for future-ready skills in high-impact areas like data analytics, automation, and machine learning. By modernizing delivery models with AI, institutions can increase learner engagement, reduce delivery costs, and expand their addressable market across diverse workforce segments.
College students can get Google's AI Pro plan for free now. Here's how - Sabrina Ortiz, ZDnet
- Students ages 18+ get the Google AI Pro plan for free for 12 months.
- Plan includes access to Deep Research, Veo 3, Jules, and more.
- Part of a larger $1 billion investment in AI education and job training.
Monday, August 11, 2025
What we’re optimizing ChatGPT for - OpenAI
The Quantum-AI Convergence Changes Everything - Click Future, Youtube
Quantum-enhanced AI can solve problems impossible for classical systems, excelling in areas like optimization, pattern recognition, and complex system modeling. It can learn from smaller datasets and has demonstrated creativity and insight beyond classical AI. The podcast highlights rapid advancements in this field and outlines practical applications across various industries, including drug discovery, material science, climate science, finance, and space exploration. [summary provided in part by Gemini 2.5 Flash]
Sunday, August 10, 2025
CSU Faculty Projects Test AI for Creative Majors, Design - Abby Sourwine, GovTech
An AI-Enhanced Education - Allison Elliott, Columbia Engineering
Saturday, August 09, 2025
99% of People Are Using ChatGPT Wrong (Do This Instead) - There's An AI For That
Role Prompting: Assigning ChatGPT a specific persona (e.g., career coach, finance professor) to influence the style and quality of its responses [00:43].Chain of Thought Prompting: Guiding ChatGPT to solve problems step-by-step to improve accuracy and clarity [03:29].Specifying Format and Constraints: Directing ChatGPT on how to format its answers (e.g., bullet points, word count, tone) for better readability [04:42].Few-Shot Prompting: Providing examples to help ChatGPT match a desired style or tone [06:38].Iterative Prompting: Breaking down complex requests into smaller, sequential steps [07:22].
Friday, August 08, 2025
GPT-5 is here: Expert intelligence for everyone - OpenAI
AI literacy: What it is, what it isn’t, who needs it and why it’s hard to define - Daniel Schiff, et al; the Conversation
Thursday, August 07, 2025
Timeline for AGI: 2030 with 50% chance: Demis Hassabis and Lex Fridman - Lex Clips
GPT-5 is here: Expert intelligence for everyone - OpenAI
Wednesday, August 06, 2025
AI in the University: From Generative Assistant to Autonomous Agent This Fall - Ray Schroeder, Inside Higher Education
We have become accustomed to generative artificial intelligence in the past couple of years. That will not go away, but increasingly, it will serve in support of agents. “Where generative AI creates, agentic AI acts.” That’s how my trusted assistant, Gemini 2.5 Pro deep research, describes the difference. By the way, I commonly use Gemini 2.5 Pro as one of my research tools, as I have in this column, however, it is I who writes the column. Agents, unlike generative tools, create and perform multistep goals with minimal human supervision. The essential difference is found in its proactive nature. Rather than waiting for a specific, step-by-step command, agentic systems take a high-level objective and independently create and execute a plan to achieve that goal. This triggers a continuous, iterative workflow that is much like a cognitive loop.
Marketing and enrollment surge to gain AI’s competitive edge - Alcino Donadel, University Business
As AI tools prove more effective in the workplace, higher education marketing and enrollment management offices face mounting pressure to adopt new technologies, or risk falling behind. That’s according to the latest annual survey from Education Dynamics and the Online and Professional Education Association, two organizations that support adult and online learners. Respondents specialized in marketing, enrollment management, student success services and admissions. Nearly two-thirds used AI or other emerging technology in 2025, up 15 percentage points from last year. Institutional adoption increased at a similar rate.
Tuesday, August 05, 2025
"Superintelligence is Near! Three innovations that prove it! (I think Fast Takeoff just started!!)" - David Shapiro, YouTube
"AlphaGo Moment" For Self Improving AI... can this be real? - Wes Roth, YouTube
This podcast discusses a new research paper from China titled "AlphaGo Moment for model architecture discovery" [00:05]. The paper introduces ASIArch, an AI system that autonomously innovates its own architecture, claiming that humans are the bottleneck in AI research [01:12, 01:21]. ASIArch reportedly conducted almost 2,000 autonomous experiments, discovering 106 innovative linear attention architectures, and the researchers claim to have established the first empirical scaling law for scientific discovery, suggesting that increased computation can lead to better architectures and more innovation [02:54, 03:31]. The research found that a small number of approaches yielded the majority of breakthroughs, with a significant contribution from the AI's own experience [08:29, 09:42]. While the implications are significant, some experts have expressed skepticism regarding the methodology [15:30, 15:56]. The research is open source, and the general trend of self-improving AI research is growing [17:18, 17:32]. [Gemini 2.5 Flash assisted with generating the summary of the podcast]
https://youtu.be/QGeql15rcLo?
Monday, August 04, 2025
Researchers create ‘virtual scientists’ to solve complex biological problems - Hanae Armitage, Stanford
Stanford Medicine researchers created a team of virtual scientists backed by artificial intelligence to help solve problems in their real-world lab. There may be a new artificial intelligence-driven tool to turbocharge scientific discovery: virtual labs. Modeled after a well-established Stanford School of Medicine research group, the virtual lab is complete with an AI principal investigator and seasoned scientists. “Good science happens when we have deep, interdisciplinary collaborations where people from different backgrounds work together, and often that’s one of the main bottlenecks and challenging parts of research,” said James Zou, PhD, associate professor of biomedical data science who led a study detailing the development of the virtual lab. “In parallel, we’ve seen this tremendous advance in AI agents, which, in a nutshell, are AI systems based on language models that are able to take more proactive actions.”