Tag: Nobel prize

Eyeing AI Jobs? Nobel Prize Winner Cautions on Rush Into STEM After Artificial Intelligence Rise
Technology

Eyeing AI Jobs? Nobel Prize Winner Cautions on Rush Into STEM After Artificial Intelligence Rise

[ad_1] Eyeing AI jobs? A Nobel Prize-winning labor market economist has cautioned younger generations against piling into studying science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) subjects, saying  as “empathetic” and creative skills may thrive in a world dominated by artificial intelligence. Christopher Pissarides, professor of economics at the London School of Economics, said that workers in certain IT jobs risk sowing their “own seeds of self-destruction“ by advancing AI that will eventually take the same jobs in the future.While Pissarides is an optimist on AI's overall impact on the jobs market, he raised concerns for those taking STEM subjects hoping to ride the coattails of the technological advances. He said that despite rapid growth in the demand for STEM skills current...
John Goodenough, a Nobel Prize-winning co-creator of the revolutionary lithium battery, dies at 100
Technology

John Goodenough, a Nobel Prize-winning co-creator of the revolutionary lithium battery, dies at 100

[ad_1] John Goodenough, who shared the 2019 Nobel Prize in chemistry for his work developing the lithium-ion battery that transformed technology with rechargeable power for devices ranging from cellphones, computers, and pacemakers to electric cars, has died at 100, the University of Texas announced Monday.Goodenough died Sunday at an assisted living facility in Austin, the university announced. No cause of death was given. Goodenough was a faculty member at Texas for nearly 40 years. Goodenough was the oldest person to receive a Nobel Prize when he shared the award with British-born American scientist M. Stanley Whittingham and Japan's Akira Yoshino. “Live to 97 and you can do anything,” Goodenough said when the Nobel was awarded, adding he was grateful he wasn't forced to retire at 65...
This Is The First ‘Picture’ Of a Neanderthal Family
Technology

This Is The First ‘Picture’ Of a Neanderthal Family

[ad_1] The sequencing of the first Neanderthal genome in 2010, offered a new way to discover more about our long extinct forerunners. The original Flintstones? The largest genetic study of Neanderthals ever conducted has offered an unprecedented snapshot of a family, including a father and his teenage daughter, who lived in a Siberian cave around 54,000 years ago.The new research, published in the journal Nature on Wednesday, used DNA sequencing to look at the social life of a Neanderthal community, finding that women were more likely to stray from the cave than men. Previous archaeological excavations have shown that Neanderthals were more sophisticated than once thought, burying their dead and making elaborate tools and ornaments. However little is known about their family structure...