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  • AI-generated media are on the rise and are here to stay. Regulation is urgently needed, but in the meantime creators, users and content distributors need to pursue various ways, and adopt various tools, for responsible generation, sharing and detection of AI-generated content.

    Editorial
  • The immense amount of Wikipedia articles makes it challenging for volunteers to ensure that cited sources support the claim they are attached to. Petroni et al. use an information-retrieval model to assist Wikipedia users in improving verifiability.

    • Fabio Petroni
    • Samuel Broscheit
    • Sebastian Riedel
    ArticleOpen Access
  • With the rapid development of natural language processing (NLP) models in the last decade came the realization that high performance levels on test sets do not imply that a model robustly generalizes to a wide range of scenarios. Hupkes et al. review generalization approaches in the NLP literature and propose a taxonomy based on five axes to analyse such studies: motivation, type of generalization, type of data shift, the source of this data shift, and the locus of the shift within the modelling pipeline.

    • Dieuwke Hupkes
    • Mario Giulianelli
    • Zhijing Jin
    AnalysisOpen Access
  • The number of publications in artificial intelligence (AI) has been increasing exponentially and staying on top of progress in the field is a challenging task. Krenn and colleagues model the evolution of the growing AI literature as a semantic network and use it to benchmark several machine learning methods that can predict promising research directions in AI.

    • Mario Krenn
    • Lorenzo Buffoni
    • Michael Kopp
    AnalysisOpen Access
  • AlphaFold2 has revolutionized bioinformatics, but its ability to predict protein structures with high accuracy comes at the price of a costly database search for multiple sequence alignments. Fang and colleagues pre-train a large-scale protein language model and use it in conjunction with AlphaFold2 as a fully trainable and efficient model for structure prediction.

    • Xiaomin Fang
    • Fan Wang
    • Le Song
    ArticleOpen Access
  • It is widely known that AI-based recommendation systems on social media and news websites can isolate humans from diverse information, eventually trapping them in so-called information cocoons, where they are exposed to a narrow range of viewpoints. Li et al. introduce an adaptive information dynamics model to uncover the origin of information cocoons in complex human–AI interaction systems, and test their findings on two large real-world datasets.

    • Jinghua Piao
    • Jiazhen Liu
    • Yong Li
    Article
  • Deep learning can help develop non-invasive technology for decoding speech from brain activity, which could improve the lives of patients with brain injuries. Défossez et al. report a contrastive-learning approach to decode speech listening from human participants, using public databases of recordings based on non-invasive magnetic and electrical measurements.

    • Alexandre Défossez
    • Charlotte Caucheteux
    • Jean-Rémi King
    ArticleOpen Access
  • Online matching platforms are increasingly used for applications with positive social impact such as matching blood donors with recipients, where matching algorithms need to balance fairness with an efficiency objective. The authors demonstrate, both in computational simulations and using real data from the Facebook Blood Donations tool, that introducing a simple online matching policy can substantially increase the likelihood of donor action.

    • Duncan C. McElfresh
    • Christian Kroer
    • John P. Dickerson
    Article
  • Fine motor skill recovery in hand rehabilitation is a challenge due to limited finger movement sensing and closed-loop control algorithms in existing rehabilitation gloves. Sui et al. develop a soft-packaged rehabilitation glove, integrating sensing, actuation, a human–machine interface, power, electronics and a closed-loop algorithm. The glove aids patients after a stroke to recover fine motor skills of the fingers in a portable manner.

    • Mengli Sui
    • Yiming Ouyang
    • Shiwu Zhang
    Article
  • Efficient quantum-control protocols are required to utilize the full power of quantum computers. A new reinforcement learning approach can realize efficient, robust control of quantum many-body states, promising a practical advance in harnessing present-day quantum technologies.

    • Ying Lu
    • Shi-Ju Ran
    News & Views
  • Identifying interventions that can induce a desired effect is challenging owing to the combinatorial number of possible choices in design space. Zhang and colleagues propose an active learning approach with theoretical guarantees to discover optimal interventions in causal models, and demonstrate the framework in the context of genetic perturbation design using single-cell transcriptomic data.

    • Jiaqi Zhang
    • Louis Cammarata
    • Caroline Uhler
    Article