New open-source platform allows users to evaluate performance of AI-powered chatbots
04 June 2024Researchers have developed a platform for the interactive evaluation of AI-powered chatbots such as ChatGPT.
Researchers have developed a platform for the interactive evaluation of AI-powered chatbots such as ChatGPT.
A new partnership between Aviva and Cambridge is asking what do advances in technology and data science mean for the future of insurance?
Researchers at the Winton Centre for Risk and Evidence Communication spent the weekend surveying people's attitudes towards the risk of coronavirus, and their governments’ reactions.
Fairness, trust and transparency are qualities we usually associate with organisations or individuals. Today, these attributes might also apply to algorithms. As machine learning systems become more complex and pervasive, Cambridge researchers believe it’s time for new thinking about new technology.
Some of the world’s leading thinkers and practitioners in the field of Artificial Intelligence (AI) will gather in Cambridge this week to look at everything from the influence of science fiction on our dreams of the future, to ‘trust in the age of intelligent machines’.
Computers that learn for themselves are with us now. As they become more common in ‘high-stakes’ applications like robotic surgery, terrorism detection and driverless cars, researchers ask what can be done to make sure we can trust them.
In a post-crash economy, the financial industry has taken a severe hammering in the courts of public approval. Banks have never been trusted less. In a capitalist society, that’s not good news. But now bankers may have some unlikely new saviours: philosophers.
Shana Cohen and Ed Kessler discuss how individuals of different ethno-religious backgrounds in Europe can learn to trust each other, and how community-building initiatives in deprived areas can enhance the resilience of society.
Some of the world’s finest minds in academic philosophy are debating the impact of the internet and cloud computing in Cambridge this week.
Philosopher Tom Simpson asks: can we build a trustworthy and safe Internet?