Week Ending 4.19.2020

 

RESEARCH WATCH: 4.19.2020

 
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Over the past week, 52 new papers were published in "Computer Science - Artificial Intelligence".

  • The paper discussed most in the news over the past week was by a team at Google: "AutoML-Zero: Evolving Machine Learning Algorithms From Scratch" by Esteban Real et al (Mar 2020), which was referenced 15 times, including in the article New AI improves itself through Darwinian-style evolution in Big Think. The paper also got the most social media traction with 1444 shares. A user, @tomvarsavsky, tweeted "One of the most interesting results I've seen in ML in the last 5 years. Evolving programs using a generic search space and generic mutations leads to the discovery of not only SGD and two layer NNs but also rand init, ReLU, Grad Norm. Can someone find a hidden inductive bias?".

  • Leading researcher Sergey Levine (University of California, Berkeley) came out with "Thinking While Moving: Deep Reinforcement Learning with Concurrent Control" @JeffDean tweeted "Some very nice work from our robotics research team enables robots to get a faster grasp on the problem at hand by contemplating and doing at the same time. Up to 50% faster grasping!".

  • The paper shared the most on social media this week is by a team at University of Tübingen: "Shortcut Learning in Deep Neural Networks" by Robert Geirhos et al (Apr 2020) with 193 shares. The investigators seek to distil how many of deep learnings problem can be seen as different symptoms of the same underlying problem : shortcut learning. @hardmaru (hardmaru) tweeted "Shortcut Learning in Deep Neural Networks Humans also take shortcuts and cheat in life when we can get away with it. Interesting they mention that ways to overcome shortcut learning for artificial agents might apply to closing loopholes in human systems".

  • The most influential Twitter user discussing papers is Horace Dediu who shared "Generalized logistic growth modeling of the COVID-19 outbreak in 29 provinces in China and in the rest of the world" by Ke Wu et al (Mar 2020) and said: "Incidentally, the data I use is smoothed over 7 days. See also: and".

Over the past week, 184 new papers were published in "Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition".

This week was active for "Computer Science - Computers and Society", with 30 new papers.

  • The paper discussed most in the news over the past week was by a team at Boston University: "Anonymous Collocation Discovery: Harnessing Privacy to Tame the Coronavirus" by Ran Canetti et al (Mar 2020), which was referenced 10 times, including in the article How Reliable and Effective Are the Mobile Apps Being Used to Fight COVID-19? in Wire. The paper author, Ari Trachtenberg (Boston University), was quoted saying "When a person is tested positive for COVID-19, the person could choose (through the administrating medical professional) to voluntarily share their list of random numbers -- either their own generated numbers or the numbers that the app observed". The paper got social media traction with 57 shares. On Twitter, @alexcryptan said "By now there are at least 5 academic initiatives: ● TCN ● Canetti et al. ● DP-3T (European) ● PACT ● MIT protocol".

  • Leading researcher Yoshua Bengio (Université de Montréal) came out with "Toward Trustworthy AI Development: Mechanisms for Supporting Verifiable Claims", which had 60 shares over the past 3 days. @ed_teather tweeted "This paper on trustworthy & accountable AI is excellent on how to move ethics from principles to practice. Particularly like the idea of putting a bounty on bias & developing 3rd party audits. Congrats to all those involved 👏👏". This paper was also shared the most on social media with 305 tweets. @ed_teather (Ed Teather) tweeted "This paper on trustworthy & accountable AI is excellent on how to move ethics from principles to practice. Particularly like the idea of putting a bounty on bias & developing 3rd party audits. Congrats to all those involved 👏👏".

Over the past week, 17 new papers were published in "Computer Science - Human-Computer Interaction".

This week was active for "Computer Science - Learning", with 256 new papers.

Over the past week, nine new papers were published in "Computer Science - Multiagent Systems".

Over the past week, 23 new papers were published in "Computer Science - Neural and Evolutionary Computing".

Over the past week, 37 new papers were published in "Computer Science - Robotics".


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