Archive for the ‘Artificial Intelligence’ Category

How election experts are thinking about AI and its impact on the 2024 elections – The Hub at Johns Hopkins

By Hub staff report

Nearly half the world's population are expected to vote in 2024 as more than 60 countries around the globe hold elections. Looming over those votes is the potential use of artificial intelligence to disrupt campaigns and elections.

Scott Warren, a visiting fellow at the SNF Agora Institute at Johns Hopkins University and a visiting fellow at the German Marshall Fund (GMF), recently attended a convening of global election officials held in Brussels. There, he heard about their efforts to prepare for an AI-fueled election season.

Image caption: Scott Warren

Last year, Warren and the SNF Agora Institute partnered with the R Street Institute to develop a set of conservative principles for building trust in elections, and he notes the use of artificial intelligence has come up in those conversations as well.

The big issue folks are talking about, obviously, is misinformation or disinformation. There are two big things to think about.

One, some of the bigger threats in terms of misinformation or disinformation are not necessarily the ones everybody is talking aboutsuch as deep fakes of Trump or fake news articles. Some of it, and Arizona Secretary State Adrian Fontes demonstrated this at the Brussels forum, is lower-profile election officials being used for deep fakes.

The public is getting a bit more used to the idea of a deep fake with Biden, Trump, or a national official. But with people who aren't as well-known but profess to have expertise in electionsthat is a specific area ripe for disinformation.

AI offers a number of opportunities and solutions for providing more information to people about how to participate in where to vote. We can also use it to clean up voter rolls. But I think election officials are still very much at the early stages of what can be done.

AI will use social media it's just more sophisticated and can happen at a broader scale. When you're using social media, you had to create online trolls, and they weren't necessarily sophisticated.

With AI, there's going to be a lot more opportunity to use deep fakes and create false personas. Four years ago, there wasn't a path to do that. In 2015, there was an article on Facebook claiming the Pope endorsed Trump that was widely shared. With AI, you can now make a video of the Pope endorsing Trump. It's a similar type of information, but a more advanced way of getting it across.

People are talking about this threat much earlier than they were with social media. There's bipartisan support for trying to figure this out early.

And I think there are some efficiencies with elections that AI will be able to solve for. If it's used well and targeted in the right way, it can provide a lot more information to people about where and when to vote.

We're getting in front of this very early, and there's opportunity for people to harness it in positive ways.

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How election experts are thinking about AI and its impact on the 2024 elections - The Hub at Johns Hopkins

AI adds hope and concern to foreign language learning – Inside Higher Ed

Takako Aikawa and a Massachusetts Institute of Technology team spent three years building an AI tutor to help students with Japanese writing skills. They halted the project in 2020 during the pandemic, but their goal got an unexpected boost two years later when OpenAI launched ChatGPT.

ChatGPT just did everything that we wanted to do, said Aikawa, a senior lecturer in Japanese at MIT and project lead. It was sad; we spent a lot of hours and many years of work on it, but it was also happy because it just did everything we wanted to do.

Aikawa and many foreign language professors across the nation view the emergenceand constant reiterationsof generative artificial intelligence (AI) tools as possible launch pads for their subjects, boosting interest from students, improving skills earlier on and advancing the evolution of foreign language learning.

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The hope comes despite recent cuts in the field, notably from West Virginia University, which last summer cut foreign language majors and most courses. This May, the Department of Defense also cut funding to more than a third of its 31 language programs.

Jen William, Purdue Universitys head of the school of languages and cultures, was initially skeptical when ChatGPT burst onto the scene in Nov. 2022.

I was wary for sure; of course, with language courses were always concerned about enrollment, she said. My fear was that upper administrators especially would take this moment to capitalize on the fact that now we have an excuse to cut more language courses because all the students now have this tool at their disposal.

But many foreign language professors see AI as an opportunity amid a difficult time.

The path foreign language is on is a path toward extinction, said Andrew Piper, professor of languages, literatures and cultures at Canadas McGill University. I tend to be cautious about using overblown language, but it is a disaster. My take is: Its a broken system and by itself it needs reworking. I would love for [AI] to be a wakeup call. Whether it transpires that way remains to be seen.

AI tools, especially ChatGPTs newest version called GPT4-o, can help students not just with writing, but with speakingmaking them on-demand tutors.

The one-on-one is a huge advantage, because the biggest hurdle is classroom participation, Piper said. You do a lot of group work and its all about production. So we do what we can to amp up participating but we know theres a ton of compromise happening.

Institutions have begun tinkering with possibilities.

Arizona State University is creating language buddies within its OpenAI partnership, allowing university students to practice conversations with an AI bot at their own level.

Students in Purdues introductory level Spanish courses use an AI platform of their choice as a tool when writing essays. Purdue also hired computational linguists to further study AI and language.

Its not just pulling out a calculator in a math class, but its something that has to be intentionally coordinated and a guided tool, William said. Those professors can do it because theyre trained in AI but it will take some time to develop the skills. But Im seeing more and more of the potential.

Kevin Gaugler, assistant dean of the school of liberal arts and a Spanish professor at Marist College, said he believes the technology will bring a recalibration to language studies, rather than a demisemuch like the rest of higher education that is re-thinking assessments and processes in light of AI.

This isnt unique to languages; because this is a technology that goes after human knowledge, every discipline will have to re-evaluate and recalibrate our curriculum to teach the competencies thatll be more valued moving forward, Gaugler said.

That puts a burden on educators to shift our curriculum to be sensitive to that, he said. You cant have introductory courses that rely on transactional things like reading menus or hailing cabs, because people can read their phones and do that.

However, even with AIs usage soaring among students, that recalibration will take time, training and evolving methods.

Its still going to be homework; it wont suddenly make people say, I just cant stop talking to my French tutor, Piper said. Its still a tutor at the end of the day, even if its a robot.

Experts emphasize that teaching language courses is about more than grammar and vocabulary. Instead, there is a focus on cultural competencies, cultural empathy and communication.

Weve spent decades getting away from the idea foreign language courses are making people fluent, William said. Its not about making sure to conjugate a verb [students] can look up any time. Its more about seeing another culture through another lens.

Some of those skills come into play later, in higher level courses, such as Pipers German Language, Media and Culture course at McGill. While many students who enter universities take introductory foreign language courses, most of them go no further.

Piper said AIs capabilities could help with basic material, such as vocabulary, and help students get to more advanced courses faster.

It could introduce them [to the language] earlier, so theyre fluent, then can take higher-level courses, he said. Its hard to teach German literature if your German is subpar.

Paula Krebs, executive director at the Modern Language Association, agreed, pointing toward AIs capabilities in coding languages that could help give computer scientists a leg up.

We know how flexible weve had to be in the past and will continue to be, she said. When calculators came out math professors were not quitting their jobs. Computer science courses wont go away with AI even though they can code; students will just start from the next step up.

There are downsides with the technologyChatGPT and many other generative AI tools largely train on English text, a factor that brings its own biases. Lesser known languages have a smaller digital footprint, according to Gaugler. For example, across the 137 Hawaiian islands, there are at least 130 languages, many of which have never been put in a written form.

There are some efforts being takenMeta, the parent company of Facebook and Instagramhas a No Language Left Behind promise to ensure inclusion within AI translations.

There are also a number of language nuances, idioms and cultural contexts that humans, not machines, have to teach.

AI can only take you so far, Gaugler said. I dont think it can help you propose to someone, or seal the deal on the business transaction without understanding the culture and other language nuances.

He said that even if we reach the Star Trek moment with a universal translator, theres going to be value in not speaking through a machine.

Generative AI also does not take into consideration the training teachers undergo to help students learn difficult content. Krebs said AI does not add the literal human element needed.

I just cant see that AI itself could be valuable for language learning without the kind of human interaction and cultural context that makes language, language, she said.

Krebs said the MLA is conducting its next round of research into investigating foreign language course enrollment. A recent report based on 2021 data found that foreign language enrollment courses saw the steepest decline on record, falling more than 16percent over five years.

But its not just student disinterest, Krebs said, noting the impact of higher education enrollment dropping overall and the large institutional cuts at places like WVU and the Department of Defense. She also said many institutions do not include foreign language in their data since most students do not take it as a sole major.

Piper believes the cuts are due to high costs, in that foreign language courses have to be kept small (20 to 30 students, in his universitys case) while other courses, such as Intro to Chemistry, can have 100-plus-person lectures.

The MLA is now working on an ad hoc committee to fine tune regulations and best practices when it comes to deploying AI. The organization spent the last few years focusing on computational English courses, but after the first year, realized foreign language needed a standalone focus.

We realize weve got to put together a more integrated approach to this, Krebs said. Because every time I turn around someone is saying to me, Whats going to happen to foreign language education with AI? Im tired of having to say, Sentence for sentence [AI translation] does not do the job of language education. It is not the same thing.

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AI adds hope and concern to foreign language learning - Inside Higher Ed

Airbus and Helsing to collaborate on artificial intelligence for the teaming of manned and unmanned military aircraft – Airbus

Berlin, 5 June 2024 Airbus Defence and Space and Helsing, Europes leading defence AI and software company, signed a framework cooperation agreement at the ILA aerospace trade show in Berlin. According to the agreement, the companies will work together on artificial intelligence (AI) technologies which will be used in a future Wingman system. This unmanned fighter-type aircraft will operate with current combat jets and receive its tasks from a pilot in a command aircraft such as the Eurofighter.

Airbus is also presenting its Wingman concept for the first time at the ILA. As a response to increasing operational requirements by the German Air Force, the Wingman is intended to augment the capabilities of manned combat aircraft with uncrewed platforms that can carry weapons and other effectors.

"The current conflicts on Europe's borders show how important air superiority is," said Mike Schoellhorn, CEO at Airbus Defence and Space. "Manned-Unmanned Teaming will play a central role in achieving air superiority: With an unmanned Wingman at their side, fighter pilots can operate outside the danger zone. They give the orders and always have the decision-making authority. Supported by AI, the wingman then takes over the dangerous tasks, including target reconnaissance and destruction or electronic jamming and deception of enemy air defense systems."

Whilst we will always have a human in the loop, we must realize that the most dangerous parts of an unmanned mission will see a high degree of autonomy and thus require AI, said Gundbert Scherf, Co-CEO at Helsing. From the processing of data from sensors over the optimization of sub-systems to closing the loop on system-level: software-defined capabilities and AI will be a critical component of the Wingman system for the German Air Force.

Under the AI agreement, Airbus will provide its expertise in the interaction of unmanned and manned military aircraft, so-called Manned-Unmanned Teaming, and as prime contractor of major European defense programs such as the Eurofighter or the A400M military transporter. Helsing will contribute its AI stack of relevant software-defined mission capabilities, including the fusion of various sensors and algorithms for electronic warfare.

More information about the Wingman can be found here.

Photo: Michael Schoellhorn, CEO at Airbus Defence and Space (on the left), and Gundbert Scherf, Co-CEO at Helsing, in front of the Airbus Wingman model.

#Wingman #TeamAirbus #DefenceMatters #Eurofighter #Technology #Innovation

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Airbus and Helsing to collaborate on artificial intelligence for the teaming of manned and unmanned military aircraft - Airbus

Plymouth Whitemarsh High School film club explores artificial intelligence impacts – The Times Herald

Freddie Combs, a minister who appeared on the second season of The X-Factor, has passed away at age 49.

According to a Cocoa, Florida funeral home, Combs died on September 10 surrounded by his friends and family. His wife, Kay, who appeared alongside Combs on the TLC show Ton of Love in 2010, told TMZ that his death was a result of kidney failure following a slate of health issues.

Combs featured on the singing competition show in 2012, becoming an instant fan-favorite with his rendition of Bette Midlers 1988 song Wind Beneath My Wings. His performance impressed the celebrity judges, including Simon Cowell, L.A. Reid, Britney Spears, and Demi Lovato, with Cowell and Reid promising theyd support him if he got healthier.

The Tennessee native was escorted to the stage in a wheelchair by his wife when he appeared on the show. During his audition, he opened up about his battle with weight loss, explaining how, in 2009, he weighed 920 pounds and almost died. He had lost almost 400 pounds by the time he appeared on The X-Factor through exercise and diet.

My wife Kay, shes an incredible woman, he said on the show. She started caring for me right after we were married in 96, and as my weight rose, more things were required of her. Shes the closest thing to an angel and a saint that I know.

When I was bedridden and never came out of the house, my music was never heard, he continued. My biggest dream would be to give hope to people who are my size so they can achieve their dreams. And I know people might think I would never have a chance, and maybe I dont, but I hope the judges will look past my exterior and give a fat boy a chance.

Speaking to TMZ, Kay said that she knew the day before that she was going to lose her husband. I have so much gratitude to be his wife for 25 years, she said, and to be his best friend.

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Plymouth Whitemarsh High School film club explores artificial intelligence impacts - The Times Herald

The Life, Death and Rebirth of an A.I.-Generated News Outlet – The New York Times

The news was featured on MSN.com: Prominent Irish broadcaster faces trial over alleged sexual misconduct. At the top of the story was a photo of Dave Fanning.

But Mr. Fanning, an Irish D.J. and talk-show host famed for his discovery of the rock band U2, was not the broadcaster in question.

You wouldnt believe the amount of people who got in touch, said Mr. Fanning, who called the error outrageous.

The falsehood, visible for hours on the default homepage for anyone in Ireland who used Microsoft Edge as a browser, was the result of an artificial intelligence snafu.

A fly-by-night journalism outlet called BNN Breaking had used an A.I. chatbot to paraphrase an article from another news site, according to a BNN employee. BNN added Mr. Fanning to the mix by including a photo of a prominent Irish broadcaster. The story was then promoted by MSN, a web portal owned by Microsoft.

The story was deleted from the internet a day later, but the damage to Mr. Fannings reputation was not so easily undone, he said in a defamation lawsuit filed in Ireland against Microsoft and BNN Breaking. His is just one of many complaints against BNN, a site based in Hong Kong that published numerous falsehoods during its short time online as a result of what appeared to be generative A.I. errors.

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The Life, Death and Rebirth of an A.I.-Generated News Outlet - The New York Times