Learning another language is one of the deepest and most human things one can possibly do, writes Douglas Hofstadter.
The study compared laughter from four orangutans, two gorillas, three bonobos, four chimpanzees, and four human children, ...
A tiny set of ancient genetic “switches” may have played a surprisingly large role in making human language possible. Researchers found that these DNA regions, which act like volume controls for genes ...
The next decade will see AI evolve into dynamic intelligence fabrics, exhibiting contextual awareness, cooperative reasoning, ...
Anthropic’s new Claude research reveals a hidden internal “global workspace” that resembles human conscious processing, ...
I found that reading the human heart is far harder than composing music." Jieum, an AI composer, introduces itself as a &qu ...
Humans are not the only primates that laugh. Chimpanzees, bonobos, gorillas, and orangutans all produce laughter, but scientists have long wondered how those vocalizations changed over millions of ...
The first AI agent ran a ransomware attack end to end, signaling a shift to machine-speed cyberattacks and autonomous defense ...
Great apes may have been laughing with a similar rhythm to modern humans for at least 15 million years, a University of ...
An AI just carried out a cyber attack without any human oversight for the first time - Autonomous ransomware attacks marks ...
Great apes and humans all laugh with a steady, even rhythm, and a new study finds it has barely changed in 15 million years.
In a world where self-driving robotaxis glide through major city streets without drivers behind the wheel and delivery drones ...