- published: 17 May 2016
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For the first time, scientists at IBM Research have demonstrated reliably storing 3 bits of data per cell and retaining the information at elevated temperatures using a relatively new memory technology, known as phase-change memory (PCM). This research breakthrough advances the development of a faster and more durable memory technology for applications including mobile phones, the Internet of Things and enterprise cloud data storage.
A 360 video of the IBM Quantum Lab at the IBM T.J. Watson Research Center in Yorktown Heights, N.Y. Inside, IBM scientists are researching and building a practical quantum computer, which when built, will be one of the greatest milestones in the history of information technology. Inspired by nature and the laws of quantum mechanics, IBM believes quantum computing is the future of computing and has the potential to solve challenges that are out of reach of today’s classical computers. On May 4, 2016, IBM Research announced that for the first time ever it is making quantum computing available to the public, providing access to a quantum computing platform from any desktop or mobile device via the cloud. Users of the IBM Quantum Experience can create algorithms and run experiments on an IBM ...
In a new paper appearing today in the IEEE journal Computer, IBM scientists Giovanni Cherubini, Jens Jelitto and Vinodh Venkatesan unveil their cognitive storage concept, which isn’t available yet, but could be very soon. The idea is based on a metric they call data value, which is akin to determining the value of a rare piece of art — the higher demand and the rarer the piece typically translates to a highly sought after work of art, which also requires more security to protect it.
Quantum computing has been a Holy Grail for researchers ever since Nobel Prize-winning physicist Richard Feynman, in 1981, challenged the scientific community to build computers based on quantum mechanics. For decades, the pursuit remained firmly in the theoretical realm. But now IBM scientists believe they're on the cusp of building systems that will take computing to a whole new level.
2014 IBM Research Cognitive Systems Colloquium keynote by John Underkoffler, CEO of Oblong Technologies.
David Ferrucci, IBM Fellow and principal investigator on the IBM Watson Project, discussed what is on the horizon for the fields of artificial intelligence and machine learning. He also articulates the many challenges involved in developing a machine that learns from data mining and past decisions to make new predictions! The programmers for the PILL Method Financial Robot© have to solve similar challenges to develop its algorithms. We strive to continue to be leaders in the field of aritificial intelligence to optimize our client's finances!
The first new class of polymers discovered in over 20 years by IBM researchers is the world's first family of materials that are stronger than bone, self-healing and solvent-resistant while being completely recyclable back to their starting material. These new experimental polymers, coming by way of a novel 'computational chemistry' hybrid approach to accelerate the materials discovery process, could deliver cheaper, lighter, stronger and recyclable materials ideal for the semiconductor, aerospace, airline and automotive industries. More at research.ibm.com.
IBM Research is making quantum computing available to the public for the first time, providing access to a quantum computing platform from any desktop or mobile device via the cloud. Users of the platform called the IBM Quantum Experience can create algorithms and run experiments on an IBM quantum processor, learn about quantum computing through tutorials and simulations, and get inspired by the possibilities of a quantum computer. To learn more about IBM’s quantum computing research and get access to the IBM Quantum Experience please visit: http://ibm.com/quantumcomputing
The IBM Computational Biology Center embraces activities at Yorktown Heights, with strong affiliations with activities at Almaden and other IBM Research Centers. Computational Biology (CompBio) including bioinformatics is the study of how computer systems can manage, analyze, and simulate the complex structures and processes inherent in living systems. CompBio Research at IBM spans pattern recognition in sequences, structures and processes, the studying of systems ranging from single protein molecules through to complex molecular interactions, and the data analysis, interpretation and reverse-engineering of complex disease-lifestyle-genomic interactions for fuller biological understanding. "CompBio" has a flavor of its own independant of its parents, biology and computer science. Nonethele...
Building artificial intelligence that faithfully mimics the human brain has been an alluring dream of scientists and engineers. Although we have the technology to put billions of transistors on a chip, we are far from fulfilling that dream. While there are practical constraints such as cost and performance that limit the extent to which biological mechanisms can be copied in silicon, there is a more fundamental barrier. Clearly, it’s not a question of quantity but that of quality. Electronic circuitry is largely deterministic; the same set of inputs will always produce the same set of outputs. But brain cells, being living things in their own right, seem to have a “mind” of their own. Brain cells exhibit what is called as stochastic behavior due to several complex phenomena such as ioni...
Building on IBM’s global Green Horizons initiative, researchers at the new lab are working closely with experts from South Africa’s Council for Scientific and Industrial Research to analyze historical and real-time data from environmental monitoring stations. Using machine learning and cognitive models, the data collected in the City of Johannesburg, the City of Tshwane and the Vaal Industrial Triangle will help provide more insight about air pollution and model the effectiveness of intervention strategies. The project has recently been extended to predict ground level ozone and air quality forecasting. Commuters in the City of Johannesburg currently spend 35 minutes extra travel time per day due to traffic congestion, according to the TomTom Traffic Index. Unreliable traffic light infras...
Commuters in the City of Johannesburg currently spend 35 minutes extra travel time per day due to traffic congestion, according to the TomTom Traffic Index. Unreliable traffic light infrastructure provides challenges to traffic light management in the city. Using real time anonymized traffic data from TomTom combined with Twitter, IBM scientists have developed a traffic optimization recommendation tool which can help city officials dispatch traffic volunteers, known locally as pointsmen, to the intersections where they are most urgently needed. Read more:
Read your free e-book: http://hotaudiobook.com/mebk/50/en/B00RZJ162K/book This accessible, practice-oriented and compact text provides a hands-on introduction to market research. Using the market research process as a framework, it explains how to collect and describe data and presents the most important and frequently used quantitative analysis techniques, such as Anova, regression analysis, factor analysis and cluster analysis. The book describes the theoretical choices a market researcher has to make with regard to each technique, discusses how these are converted into actions in Ibm Spss version 22 and how to interpret the output. Each chapter concludes with a case study that illustrates the process using real-world data. A comprehensive Web appendix includes additional analysis techni...
Read your free e-book: http://copydl.space/mebk/50/en/B00F75V7DC/book This accessible, practice-oriented and compact text provides a hands-on introduction to the principles of market research. Using the market research process as a framework, the authors explain how to collect and describe the necessary data and present the most important and frequently used quantitative analysis techniques, such as Anova, regression analysis, factor analysis, and cluster analysis. An explanation is provided of the theoretical choices a market researcher has to make with regard to each technique, as well as how these are translated into actions in Ibm Spss Statistics. This includes a discussion of what the outputs mean and how they should be interpreted from a market research perspective. Each chapter conc...
Mars, Incorporated and IBM Research explain how they are transforming our approach to global food safety using big data. The Consortium for Sequencing the Food Supply Chain are sequencing the genomes of millions of organisms to understand the microbiomes that exist throughout the food supply chain. With this metagenomic data, it will be possible to identify and address food safety threats on a scale that has never been seen before. Narrated by Dave Crean, Mars, Incorporated, and Jeff Welser, IBM Research – Almaden. Read more: http://www.research.ibm.com/client-programs/foodsafety/
2015年2月に、IBMリサーチの技術を用いてWatsonをコールセンターのリアルタイム支援に実用導入したみずほ銀行。 通話時間の短縮によるお客様満足度の向上、オペレーターの育成期間の短縮といった、「学習するシステム」の効果を実感されています。 ▼Watson Services [Speech to Text (US)] http://www.ibm.com/watson/developercloud/speech-to-text.html ▼IBM Research(US) https://www.research.ibm.com/labs/tokyo/
In this episode of WRLWND Radio, Marcello Sukhdeo talks with Allen Lalonde, Senior Executive for IBM Research and Development on the opening of the IBM Innovation Space, a new start up hub in Toronto which is designed to accelerate innovation. On September 21, IBM in partnership with the Ontario Centres of Excellence and the Government of Ontario launched the IBM Innovation Space. The objective of this hub is to provide the means to help entrepreneurs, startups, and developers so that they can work on innovate ideas and move rapidly their business plans from research to commercialization. In this interview, Allen Lalonde talks about why Toronto was chosen for this space, the benefits to entrepreneurs and startups by being a part of this community, the two biggest ...
In this webinar 451 Research Vice President Infrastructure Al Sadowski will update us on the 451 Research OpenStack Pulse - an unbiased view of OpenStack adoption. Distinguished Engineer & CTO IBM Blue Box Jesse Proudman and Cloudsoft CEO Duncan Johnston-Watt will then discuss why IBM Blue Box was the right dedicated cloud choice for Cloudsoft AMP; how they’ve found success using OpenStack; and the strides they’ve made rolling out a secure Blockchain network globally with Blue Box on IBM SoftLayer.
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Fault tolerant quantum computing is possible by employing quantum error correction techniques. In this talk Chow describes an implementation of a true quantum code using 4 lithographically defined superconducting qubits in a square lattice capable of measuring both types of possible quantum errors occurring on a single qubit. The experiment requires highly coherent qubits, high quality quantum operations implementing the detecting circuit, and a high quality independent qubit measurement set-up. Looking beyond this implementation, there remains both theoretical and experimental control hurdles which must be overcome to build verifiably reliable quantum networks of qubits. Chow presented some experiments which point towards these important questions and give proposals for future integration...
Matei visited IBM Research on November 2, 2015 to present this talk. Abstract: The Spark project started at UC Berkeley to provide a general engine for distributed data processing, capable of combining many types of analytics into complex workflows. It was one of the first projects to offer a functional API for big data processing, and it has grown to include the largest integrated standard library for big data, with support for relational queries, streaming, machine learning and graph processing. We discuss lessons learned bringing Spark to developers and building out its library. In particular, although Spark's functional API led to concise code, we found that it could limit opportunities for optimization, both in CPU time and memory usage. We have developed a new API called DataFrames...
C. Mohan IBM Fellow, IBM Almaden Research Center May 1, 2015 "Big Data: Hype and Reality" Abstract - Big Data has become a hot topic in the last few years in both industry and the research community. For the most part, these developments were initially triggered by the requirements of Web 2.0 companies. Both technical and non-technical issues have continued to fuel the rapid pace of developments in the Big Data space. Open source and non-traditional software entities have played key roles in the latter. As it always happens with any emerging technology, there is a fair amount of hype that accompanies the work being done in the name of Big Data. The set of clear-cut distinctions that were made initially between Big Data systems and traditional database management systems are being blurre...
IBM Research Cognitive Systems Colloquium: Brain-Inspired Computing at IBM Research - Almaden in San Jose, CA. Bryan Jackson - Need for a new architecture Rodrigo Alvarez-Icaza - TrueNorth & Compass David Berg - Transduction Brian Taba - Live demos Taking Brain-Inspired Computing to Market: http://asmarterplanet.com/blog/2014/11/taking-brain-inspired-computing-market.html The Emergence of Brain-Inspired Computing: http://asmarterplanet.com/blog/2014/11/emergence-brain-inspired-computing.html Live Blogging from the Cognitive Computing Colloquium: http://asmarterplanet.com/blog/2014/11/live-blogging-cognitive-colloquium.html IBM Research Brain-Inspired Chip: http://www.research.ibm.com/articles/brain-chip.shtml The Origins of a Brain-Inspired Chip: http://www.research.ibm.com/cognitiv...
IBM Research Cognitive Systems Colloquium: Brain-Inspired Computing at IBM Research - Almaden in San Jose, CA. John Arthur - Architecture John Best - Neuron Steve Esser - Training for TrueNorth Paul Merolla - MNIST example Taking Brain-Inspired Computing to Market: http://asmarterplanet.com/blog/2014/11/taking-brain-inspired-computing-market.html The Emergence of Brain-Inspired Computing: http://asmarterplanet.com/blog/2014/11/emergence-brain-inspired-computing.html Live Blogging from the Cognitive Computing Colloquium: http://asmarterplanet.com/blog/2014/11/live-blogging-cognitive-colloquium.html IBM Research Brain-Inspired Chip: http://www.research.ibm.com/articles/brain-chip.shtml The Origins of a Brain-Inspired Chip: http://www.research.ibm.com/cognitive-computing/brainpower/ I...
[Recorded: June 11, 2013] Dr. John E. Kelly III is senior vice president and director of IBM Research. In this position he directs the worldwide operations of IBM Research, with approximately 3,000 scientists and technical employees at 12 laboratories in 10 countries around the world, and helps guide IBM's overall technical strategy. Dr. Kelly's top priorities as head of IBM Research are to stimulate innovation in key areas of information technology, and quickly bring those innovations into the marketplace to sustain and grow IBM's existing business; to create the new businesses of IBM's future, and to apply these innovations to help IBM clients succeed. IBM Research breakthroughs have helped to create and shape the world's computing industry, while more recent breakthroughs, including...
"IBM Watson for Healthcare" Dr. Martin Kohn, Chief Medical Scientist, Care Delivery Systems, IBM Research Abstract: We have solid ideas about the flawed state of healthcare, the critical need for change and the future we want. Improving health outcomes while controlling costs and personalizing healthcare are among the objectives. It is clear that enabling the transformation of healthcare will require making better decisions. At the same time we are dealing with huge and expanding volumes of data. We will need tools to help us gather and analyze data to bring relevant information to decision makers so that it easier to obtain evidence-supported choices. Unstructured, text-like content is a large fraction of the data we rely on for decisions. Up until recently we have had limited ability t...