Art is widely considered to be a uniquely human phenomenon. It can encapsulate and communicate our emotions, be used to express our individualistic and communal experiences, and serve as a social commentary on these experiences, all of which are elements that are commonly thought to be human-spec...
human evaluators’ role as creativity gatekeepers of AI-produced artifacts will become critical for innovation processes. However, when humans evaluate creativity, their judgment is clouded by biases triggered by the characteristics of the creator. Drawing from folk psychology and ...
In other words, concepts like Earth System, Planetary boundaries or biophysical limits, environmental sustainability, social welfare and other important elements of our life on this planet are not satisfactorily incorporated in our knowledge horizon. The current economic worldview is based on the idea ...
Today’s complex AI deployments are often composed of multiple AI agents, and this is expected to increase in the future. Such agents may be autonomous yet coordinate among each other to meet business intents. In such a scenario, it is important for machines to generate explanations towards ot...
Some research work that uses the Candide model for facial tracking is the following. The work done by Lefevre and Odobez [64], that uses the face model along a hybrid set of features composed of adaptive and trained features. The work done by Horain et al. [52], where a statistical me...
Changes in potential regulatory elements are thought to be key drivers of phenotypic divergence. However, identifying changes to regulatory elements that underlie human-specific traits has proven very challenging. Here, we use 63 reconstructed and experi
The common origin of emotions has long been a subject of scientific interest1 with different emotional responses producing a diverse range of communicative elements, especially through the face. Facial expressions are also correlates of internal state in both humans2 and other animals3,4,5,6 and ...
Keywords: Non-LTR retrotranspososons, Human evolution, Ancient genomes, Chimpanzees, Generation of variability, Functional analyses Background Transposable Elements (TEs) are DNA sequences that are able to move or replicate in genomes via cut-and-paste and copy-and-paste-like mechanisms [1]. ...
The two most abundant rodent species in both Layers 4 and 5 are Microtus gr. socialis and Meriones spp., indicating that the environment surrounding the cave was composed mainly of dry open areas, with some vegetation cover, as indicated by the presence of Gliridae and Murinae taxa in both...
More than half of the human genome is composed of transposable elements (TEs), which are mobile genomic DNA elements capable of autonomous and non-autonomous replication1,2. The vast majority of human TEs are retrotransposons, which can be divided into three classes: long interspersed elements, ...