- Modeling Surprise
- Combining massive quantities of data, insights into human psychology, and machine learning can help manage surprising events, says Eric Horvitz.
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- Probabilistic Chips
- Krishna Palem thinks a little uncertainty in chips could extend battery life in mobile devices--and maybe the duration of Moore's Law, too.
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- NanoRadio
- Alex Zettl's tiny radios, built from nanotubes, could improve everything from cell phones to medical diagnostics.
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- Wireless Power
- Physicist Marin Soljacic is working toward a world of wireless electricity.
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- Atomic Magnetometers
- John Kitching's tiny magnetic-field sensors will take MRI where it's never gone before.
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- Offline Web Applications
- Adobe's Kevin Lynch believes that computing applications will become more powerful when they take advantage of the browser and the desktop.
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- Graphene Transistors
- A new form of carbon being pioneered by Walter de Heer of Georgia Tech could lead to speedy, compact computer processors.
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- Connectomics
- Jeff Lichtman hopes to elucidate brain development and disease with new technologies that illuminate the web of neural circuits.
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- Reality Mining
- Sandy Pentland is using data gathered by cell phones to learn about human behavior.
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