Explore Google DeepMind's innovative approach to AI through world models, a groundbreaking initiative that seeks to simulate reality and advance toward artificial general intelligence.
Google can create an AI replica of your decision-making style and personality after a two-hour interview, and that's absolutely terrifying.
After an average of 6,000 words, Stanford and Google researchers can spin up a generative agent that will act a lot like you do.
Long gone are the days of simply watching the news. Google unveiled the latest version of its TV operating system at CES 2025 on Monday. It uses the
If you're familiar with Google's Notebook LM tool that generates a customized podcast from an initial text prompt, Daily Listen is similar to this, except the "prompt" is data collected from Search and Discover,
Google DeepMind is assembling a new team of artificial intelligence researchers to develop “world models” that can simulate physical environments. The initiative will be led by Tim Brooks, a former co-lead for OpenAI’s Sora project who joined DeepMind in October to work on Google’s video generation and world simulators.
This week at CES, Google presented an early look at new software and hardware upgrades coming to Google TV devices. The new features include the integration of Gemini, Google's AI model, to the Google Assistant,
Google's groundbreaking white paper reveals how AI agents leverage advanced reasoning, real-time data access and autonomous decision-making.
Character.AI is facing scrutiny after reports revealed users created chatbots emulating real-life school shooters and their victims.
Meta’s chief AI scientist Yann LeCun described world models this way during a speech at Hudson Forum earlier this year: “A world model is your mental model of how the world behaves…You can imagine a sequence of actions you might take, and your world model will allow you to predict what the effect of the sequence of action will be on the world.”
Google is testing a new feature in Search Labs that produces a five-minute podcast from your Discover feed and news searches.