India-born scientist"s Robo Brain is a very fast online learner

August 25, 2014

Robo BrainMumbai, Aug 25: In July, scientists from Cornell University led by Ashutosh Saxena said they have developed Robo Brain—a large computational system that learns from publicly available Internet resources. The system, according to a 25 August statement by Cornell, is downloading and processing about 1 billion images, 120,000 YouTube videos and 100 million how-to documents and appliance manuals.

Information from the system, which Saxena had described at the 2014 Robotics: Science and Systems Conference in Berkeley, is being translated and stored in a robot-friendly format that robots will be able to draw on when needed.

The India-born, Indian Institute of Technology-Kanpur graduate, has now launched a website for the project at robobrain.me, which will display things the brain has learnt, and visitors will be able to make additions and corrections. Like a human learner, Robo Brain will have teachers, thanks to crowdsourcing. “Our laptops and cellphones have access to all the information we want.

If a robot encounters a situation it hasn"t seen before it can query Robo Brain in the cloud,” Saxena, assistant professor, Microsoft Faculty Fellow, and Sloan Fellow, at Cornell University, said in a statement.

Saxena and his colleagues at Cornell, Stanford and Brown universities and the University of California, Berkeley, say Robo Brain will process images to pick out the objects in them, and by connecting images and video with text, it will learn to recognize objects and how they are used, along with human language and behaviour.

His team includes Ashesh Jain, a third-year PhD computer science student at Cornell. Robo Brain employs what computer scientists call structured deep learning, where information is stored in many levels of abstraction.

Deep learning is a set of algorithms, or instruction steps for calculations, in machine learning. For instance, an easy chair is a member of a class of chairs, and going up another level, chairs are furniture.

Robo Brain knows that chairs are something you can sit on, but that a human can also sit on a stool, a bench or the lawn, the statement said.

A robot"s computer brain stores what it has learnt in a form that mathematicians call a Markov model, which can be represented graphically as a set of points connected by lines—called nodes and edges.

The nodes could represent objects, actions or parts of an image, and each one is assigned a probability—how much you can vary it and still be correct.

In searching for knowledge, a robot"s brain makes its own chain and looks for one in the knowledge base that matches within those limits.

“The Robo Brain will look like a gigantic, branching graph with abilities for multi-dimensional queries,” said Aditya Jami, a visiting researcher art Cornell, who designed the large database for the brain. Jami is also co-founder and chief technology officer at Predict Effect, Zoodig Inc. The basic skills of perception, planning and language understanding are critical for robots to perform tasks in the human environments. Robots need to perceive with sensors, and plan accordingly.

If a person wants to talk to a robot, for instance, the robot has to listen, get the context and knowledge of the environment, and plan its motion to execute the task accordingly.

For example, an industrial robot needs to detect objects to be manipulated, plan its motions and communicate with the human operator. A self-driving robot needs to detect objects on the road, plan where to drive and also communicate with the passenger.

Scientists at the lab at Cornell do not manually programme the robots. Instead, they take a machine learning approach by using variety of data and learning methods to train our robots.

“Our robots learn from watching (3D) images on the Internet, from observing people via cameras, from observing users playing video games, and from humans giving feedback to the robot,” the Cornell website reads.

There have been similar attempts to make computers understand context and learn from the Internet.

For instance, since January 2010, scientists at the Carnegie Mellon University (CMU) have been working to build a never-ending machine learning system that acquires the ability to extract structured information from unstructured Web pages.

If successful, the scientists say it will result in a knowledge base (or relational database) of structured information that mirrors the content of the Web. They call this system the never-ending language learner, or NELL.

NELL first attempts to read, or extract facts from text found in hundreds of millions of web pages (plays instrument). Second, it attempts to improve its reading competence, so that it can extract more facts from the Web, more accurately, the following day. So far, NELL has accumulated over 50 million candidate beliefs by reading the Web, and it is considering these at different levels of confidence, according to information on the CMU website.

“NELL has high confidence in 2,348,535 of these beliefs—these are displayed on this website. It is not perfect, but NELL is learning,” the website reads.

We also have IBM, or International Business Machines" Watson that beat Jeopardy players in 2011, and now has joined hands with the United Services Automobile Association (USAA) to help members of the military prepare for civilian life.

In January 2014, IBM said it will spend $1 billion to launch the Watson Group, including a $100 million venture fund to support start-ups and businesses that are building Watson-powered apps using the “Watson Developers Cloud”.

More than 2,500 developers and start-ups have reached out to the IBM Watson Group since the Watson Developers Cloud was launched in November 2013, according to a 22 August blog in the Harvard Business Review.

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Agencies
May 15,2020

Kolkata, May 15: Veteran Bengali author Debesh Roy, who was conferred the Sahitya Akademi award for his novel 'Teesta Parer Brittanto', died at a private hospital in Kolkata on Thursday, his family members said.

Roy was 84 and he is survived by his son. His wife had died earlier.

He was admitted to the hospital near his residence at Baguihati, in the eastern fringes of the city, on Wednesday after having symptoms like sodium potasium imbalance, sugar problem and breathing problem, his family members said.

He suffered a massive cardiac arrest and died at 10.50 PM.

A regular contributor to a number of Bengali dailies, he was a staunch critic of the attacks on liberals by in the country in recent times and attended protest meetings despite his failing health.

He was born in Pabna in present-day Bangladesh on December 17, 1936. He had five decades of career as a writer.

Besides Teesta Parer Britanta', he will be remembered for books like Borisaler Jogen Mondal , Manush Khun Kore Keno and Samay Asamayer Brittanto . His first book was Jajati.

His last rites will be performed tomorrow.

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News Network
May 7,2020

Toronto, May 7: Scientists have uncovered how bats can carry the MERS coronavirus without getting sick, shedding light on what triggers coronaviruses, including the one behind the COVID-19 pandemic, to jump to humans.

According to the study, published in the journal Scientific Reports, coronaviruses like the Middle East respiratory syndrome (MERS) virus, and the COVID19-causing SARS-CoV-2 virus, are thought to have originated in bats.

While these viruses can cause serious, and often fatal disease in people, bats seem unharmed, the researchers, including those from the University of Saskatchewan (USask) in Canada, said.

"The bats don't get rid of the virus and yet don't get sick. We wanted to understand why the MERS virus doesn't shut down the bat immune responses as it does in humans," said USask microbiologist Vikram Misra.

In the study, the scientists demonstrated that cells from an insect-eating brown bat can be persistently infected with MERS coronavirus for months, due to important adaptations from both the bat and the virus working together.

"Instead of killing bat cells as the virus does with human cells, the MERS coronavirus enters a long-term relationship with the host, maintained by the bat's unique 'super' immune system," said Misra, one of the study's co-authors.

"SARS-CoV-2 is thought to operate in the same way," he added.

Stresses on bats, such as wet markets, other diseases, and habitat loss, may have a role in coronavirus spilling over to other species, the study noted.

"When a bat experiences stress to their immune system, it disrupts this immune system-virus balance and allows the virus to multiply," Misra said.

The scientists, involved in the study, had earlier developed a potential treatment for MERS-CoV, and are currently working towards a vaccine against COVID-19.

While camels are the known intermediate hosts of MERS-CoV, they said bats are suspected to be the ancestral host.

There is no vaccine for either SARS-CoV-2 or MERS, the researchers noted.

Follow latest updates on the COVID-19 pandemic here

"We see that the MERS coronavirus can very quickly adapt itself to a particular niche, and although we do not completely understand what is going on, this demonstrates how coronaviruses are able to jump from species to species so effortlessly," said USask scientist Darryl Falzarano, who co-led the study.

According to Misra, coronaviruses rapidly adapt to the species they infect, but little is known on the molecular interactions of these viruses with their natural bat hosts.

An earlier study had shown that bat coronaviruses can persist in their natural bat host for at least four months of hibernation.

When exposed to the MERS virus, the researchers said, bat cells adapt, not by producing inflammation-causing proteins that are hallmarks of getting sick, but instead by maintaining a natural antiviral response.

On the contrary, they said this function shuts down in other species, including humans.

The MERS virus, the researchers said, also adapts to the bat host cells by very rapidly mutating one specific gene.

These adaptations, according to the study, result in the virus remaining long-term in the bat, but being rendered harmless until something like a disease, or other stressors, upsets this balance.

In future experiments, the scientists hope to understand how the bat-borne MERS virus adapts to infection and replication in human cells.

"This information may be critical for predicting the next bat virus that will cause a pandemic," Misra said.

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Agencies
January 19,2020

New Delhi, Jan 19: Messaging service WhatsApp which on Sunday faced issues in transmitting multimedia content including pictures and images, prompting social media users to share hilarious memes and messages, resumed regular services after over two hours.

#WhatsAppDown was the trending hashtag on Twitter for most part of Sunday afternoon in India along with several other countries such as Brazil, Europe and also parts of Middle-East including UAE, reported downdetector.in, a realtime problem and outage monitoring website.

Users of the popular messaging app were unable to send media files, stickers and GIFs.

Most users immediately went to Twitter to find out about the problem and check if others were facing the same issue.

Numerous tweets and memes took over the internet as soon as the news broke about the WhatsApp tech issue. After around two hours of technical glitch, the app resumed full service.

Even after full recovery of media transfer, people globally still continued checking the status of the messaging app.

WhatsApp has been one of the prime messaging apps since May 2009 and has recently collaborated with Facebook.

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