平特五不中

AI-analyzed blood test can predict the progression of neurodegenerative disease

Published: 28 January 2020

New technique could be used to choose best therapies for patients and measure their effectiveness...

ECE Professors Selected Canada CIFAR AI Chairs, Tal Arbel and Christophe Dubach

Published: 11 December 2019

Congratulations to Professors聽Tal Arbel聽and聽 Christophe Dubach who has just been named as two of the outstanding researchers to join the聽prestigious CIFAR AI Program, the goal of which is to ...

Nine 平特五不中 researchers selected in newest round of Canada CIFAR AI Chairs

Published: 9 December 2019

CIFAR today announced its newest cohort of Canada CIFAR AI Chairs, which includes nine researchers from 平特五不中, bringing the total number of 平特五不中 researchers named to the program to 17...

ECE Professor Tal Arbel in the news

Published: 13 November 2019

ECE Professor Tal Arbel recently presented research at the 鈥淎I and the Future of Cancer Research鈥 (From the Goodman Cancer Research Centre鈥檚 Public Lecture Series)....

Professor Tal Arbel Addresses Plenary Sesson on Machine Learning in MRI

Published: 7 June 2019

Professor Tal Arbel of the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering spoke to the plenary session at the聽International Society for Magnetic Resonance in Medicine Conference (ISMRM 2019).聽...

Mila inaugurates its new premises in Mile-Ex

Published: 30 January 2019

Mila 鈥 Quebec Institute of Artificial Intelligence officially inaugurated its new premises at the O Mile-Ex complex this week, in the presence of the Minister of Economy and Innovation for the...

AI Could Predict Cognitive Decline Leading to Alzheimer鈥檚 Disease in the Next 5 Years

Published: 4 October 2018

A team of scientists has successfully trained a new artificial intelligence (AI) algorithm to make accurate predictions regarding cognitive decline leading to Alzheimer鈥檚 disease.

Expert: Google Duplex / AI

Published: 10 May 2018

Google鈥檚 AI fest offers an ominous glimpse of the robot future: Machines fooling humans into thinking they are people raise obvious ethical concerns (source: Financial Times)

Pages

Back to top