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New Scientist - 0 views

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    The New Scientist's technology section has a lot of useful information, and a lot of it very easy to understand too. A useful source for articles for discussion, the technology section also breaks down into smaller topics like Computer Crime, Robotics, and Weapons. Some of the "Instant Expert" guides in here are well worth using in class, and some of the articles may also be suitable for Paper 2. (subscription required for some articles)
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AI topics - 2 views

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    A large repository of annotated resources (including videos) about AI, Expert Systems and Robots. It includes a section called Ethical and Social.implications.
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Op-Ed Contributor - The First Church of Robotics - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    Skeptical article about Watson.
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China's schools are quietly using AI to mark students' essays ... but do the robots mak... - 1 views

  • Scientists insist the technology is designed to assist, rather than replace, human teachers. It could help to reduce the amount of time teachers spend on grading essays and help them avoid inconsistencies caused by human errors such as lapses in attention or unconscious bias. It could also help more students, especially those in remote areas with limited access to resources, improve their writing skills more quickly. The machine is similar to the e-rater, an automated system used by the Education Testing Service in the US to grade prospective postgraduate students’ essays. But unlike the e-rater, it can read both Chinese and English. China looks to school kids to win the global AI race Artificial intelligence is developing rapidly in China with strong support from the government and the technology is used in many areas of everyday life. But the extensive tests of the essay grading machine – built by some of the leading language processing teams involved in the government and military’s internet surveillance programme – were carried out with unusual security measures in place. In most of the schools taking part in the programme, parents were not informed, access to the system terminals was limited to authorised staff, test results were strictly classified, and in some classes even the pupils were unaware that their work had been read and scored by a machine.
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