Full Self-Driving, on a Budget
Hackaday - neural network
by Bryan Cockfield
6M ago
Self-driving is currently the Holy Grail in the automotive world, with a number of companies racing to build general-purpose autonomous vehicles that can get from point A to point B with no user input. While no one has brought one to market yet, at least one has promised this feature and had customers pay for it, but continually moved the goalposts for delivery due to how challenging this problem turns out to be. But it doesn’t need to be that hard or expensive to solve, at least in some situations. The situation in question is driving on a single stretch of highway, and only focuses on steer ..read more
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Text Compression Gets Weirdly Efficient With LLMs
Hackaday - neural network
by Donald Papp
8M ago
It used to be that memory and storage space were so precious and so limited of a resource that handling nontrivial amounts of text was a serious problem. Text compression was a highly practical application of computing power. Today it might be a solved problem, but that doesn’t mean it doesn’t attract new or unusual solutions. [Fabrice Bellard] released ts_zip which uses Large Language Models (LLM) to attain text compression ratios higher than any other tool can offer. LLMs are the technology behind natural language AIs, and applying them in this way seems effective. The tradeoff? Unlike typi ..read more
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Physical Neural Network Can Be Trained Like a Digital One
Hackaday - neural network
by Donald Papp
9M ago
Here’s an unusual concept: a computer-guided mechanical neural network (video, embedded below.) Why would one want a mechanical neural network? It’s essentially a tool to explore what it would take to make physical materials work in nonstandard ways. The main part is a lattice of interlinked mechanical components. When one applies a certain force in a certain direction on one end, it causes the lattice to deform in a non-intuitive way on the other end. To make this happen, individual mechanical elements  in the lattice need to have their compliance carefully tuned under the guidance of a ..read more
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Neural Network Helps With Radar Pipeline Diagnostics
Hackaday - neural network
by Lewin Day
11M ago
Diagnosing pipeline problems is important in industry to avoid costly or dangerous failures from cracked, broken, or damaged pipes. [Kutluhan Aktar] has built an system that uses AI to assist in this difficult task. The core of the system is a MR60BHA1 60 GHz mmWave radar module, which is most typically used for breathing and heartrate detection. Here, it’s repurposed to detect fluctuating vibrations as a sign that a pipeline may be cracked or damaged. It’s paired with an Arduino Nicla Vision module, with the smart camera able to run a neural network model on the captured radar data to flag p ..read more
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Voice Without Sound
Hackaday - neural network
by Bryan Cockfield
1y ago
Voice recognition is becoming more and more common, but anyone who’s ever used a smart device can attest that they aren’t exactly fool-proof. They can activate seemingly at random, don’t activate when called or, most annoyingly, completely fail to understand the voice commands. Thankfully, researchers from the University of Tokyo are looking to improve the performance of devices like these by attempting to use them without any spoken voice at all. The project is called SottoVoce and uses an ultrasound imaging probe placed under the user’s jaw to detect internal movements in the speaker’s lary ..read more
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How To Roll Your Own Custom Object Detection Neural Network
Hackaday - neural network
by Donald Papp
1y ago
Real-time object detection, which uses neural networks and deep learning to rapidly identify and tag objects of interest in a video feed, is a handy feature with great hacker potential. Happily, it’s also possible to make customized CNNs (convolutional neural networks) tailored for one’s own needs, and that process just got easier thanks to some new documentation for the Vizy “AI camera” by Charmed Labs. Raspberry Pi-based Vizy camera Charmed Labs has been making hacker-friendly machine vision devices for a long time, and the Vizy camera impressed us mightily when we checked it out last year ..read more
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Render Yourself Invisible to AI with This Adversarial Sweater of Doom
Hackaday - neural network
by Dan Maloney
1y ago
Ugly sweater season is rapidly approaching, at least here in the Northern Hemisphere. We’ve always been a bit baffled by the tradition of paying top dollar for a loud, obnoxious sweater that gets worn to exactly one social event a year. We don’t judge, of course, but that’s not to say we wouldn’t look a little more favorably on someone’s fashion choice if it were more like this AI-defeating adversarial ugly sweater. The idea behind this research from the University of Maryland is not, of course, to inform fashion trends, nor is it to create a practical invisibility cloak. It’s really to probe ..read more
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OpenAI Hears You Whisper
Hackaday - neural network
by Al Williams
1y ago
Should you wish to try high-quality voice recognition without buying something, good luck. Sure, you can borrow the speech recognition on your phone or coerce some virtual assistants on a Raspberry Pi to handle the processing for you, but those aren’t good for major work that you don’t want to be tied to some closed-source solution. OpenAI has introduced Whisper, which they claim is an open source neural net that “approaches human level robustness and accuracy on English speech recognition.” It appears to work on at least some other languages, too. If you try the demonstrations, you’ll see th ..read more
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Neural Network Identifies Insects, Outperforming Humans
Hackaday - neural network
by Arsenijs Picugins
1y ago
There are about one million known species of insects – more than for any other group of living organisms. If you need to determine which species an insect belongs to, things get complicated quick. In fact, for distinguishing between certain kinds of species, you might need a well-trained expert in that species, and experts’ time is often better spent on something else. This is where CNNs (convolutional neural networks) come in nowadays, and this paper describes a CNN doing just as well if not better than human experts. There are two particularly challenging tasks in insect taxonomy – dealing ..read more
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Food Irradiation Detector Doesn’t Use Banana for Scale
Hackaday - neural network
by Kristina Panos
1y ago
How do the potatoes in that sack keep from sprouting on their long trip from the field to the produce section? Why don’t the apples spoil? To an extent, the answer lies in varying amounts of irradiation. Though it sounds awful, irradiation reduces microbial contamination, which improves shelf life. Most people can choose to take it or leave it, but in some countries, they aren’t overly concerned about the irradiation dosages found in, say, animal feed. So where does that leave non-vegetarians? If that line of thinking makes you want to Hulk out, you’re not alone. [kutluhan_aktar] decided to b ..read more
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