Daniel Ackerman | MIT News Office
Deep learning is everywhere. This branch of artificial intelligence curates your social media and serves your Google search results. Soon, deep learning could also check your vitals or set your thermostat. MIT researchers have developed a system that could bring deep learning neural networks to new — and much smaller — places, like the tiny computer chips in wearable medical devices, household appliances, and the 250 billion other objects that constitute the “internet of things” (IoT).
The work has been highlighted in Wired magazine.
Complete article from MIT News.
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Learning on the Edge
Adam Zewe | MIT News Office
A new technique enables AI models to continually learn from new data on intelligent edge devices like smartphones and sensors, reducing energy costs and privacy risks.
Internet of ThingsEdge SecurityIntelligent SensorsHigh Performance Computation
IIoT, Industry 4.0, and Industrial Machine Learning: a 25 Year Retrospective, Current Lessons-learned, and Future Trajectories
Wednesday, October 5, 2022 | 12:00 - 1:00pm ET, RLE Room 36-462
Speaker: Vivek Dave, Harting Innovation Hub
Near-zero Power Integrated Microsystems for the IoT
Wednesday, June 15, 2022 | 3:00pm - 4:00pm ET, Grier Room 34-401
Speaker: Matteo Rinaldi, Northeastern University