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Article d’opinion par Robert Whitley, Professeur adjoint au département de psychiatrie.

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Published on: 9 Sep 2016

“It gives you the time to actually sit down in front of something that first attracted your eye so that you understand what was the detail that may you want to sit down and sketch.”Maureen DeCarbonniers, architecture student.

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Published on: 9 Sep 2016

“Experimental clinical trials would provide the most definitive proof on any cause-and-effect relation between medical cannabis and reduced opioid use.”Mark Ware, director of clinical research at the Alan Edwards Pain Management Unit.

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Published on: 9 Sep 2016

Yesterday (September 6, 2016)saw the launch of a new book by Cathy O'Neil with the provactivetitleWeapons of Math Destruction: How Big Data Increases Inequality and Threatens Democracy. O'Neil holds aPh.D. from Harvard in Math and was atenure-track mathprofessor until 2007, when shequit academia to joinWall Street. That fledging second career came to an end just a year laterwith the Financial Crisis, after which O'Neil again changed careers and became a data scientist.

Classified as: Inequality, Bias, data science in the news, Cathy O'Neil, Weapons of Math Destruction
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Published on: 7 Sep 2016

The August 24 episode of"Babbage", apodcast from The Economistabout science and technology news, reports on an worrisomenew Russian web-site, FindFace.ru. This website allows you to input a picture of a face and do a search for that person, or someone who looks like that person,on VK.com, the Russian equivalent of Facebook. The website boasts of a 70% accuracy rate.

Classified as: Russia, data science in the news, facial recognition software, FindFace
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Published on: 25 Aug 2016

Artificial Intelligence (AI) is becomingmore and more integrated in our daily lives: AI agentsmightdecide if you get a bank loan, or if your job application will ever reachhuman eyes. Not everyone is comfortable with this trend, sincewe don't always know exactly how the AI comes to its decision. AI learns from existing data to predict future data, but its inner workings can be a mysteryeven to the AI's programmers. That's a problem if the AI is making life or death decisions, as it would in missile systems or unmanned drones.

Classified as: Artificial intelligence, data science in the news, explainable artificial intelligence, expert systems, DARPA
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Published on: 18 Aug 2016

There is a dark corner of the Internet where hackers sell their software. The process unfolds in three steps.

Classified as: hackers, data science in the news, cyber-security, dark net, semi-supervised learning
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Published on: 10 Aug 2016

What causes depression? Of course, life circumstances such as traumatic events, severe stress or grief play a role, but heredity studies have shown that a genetic predisposition to depression is equally important as environmental triggers [1]. Until very recently, though, the genes that underpin such a predisposition have proven elusive.

Classified as: depression, data science in the news, computational genetics
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Published on: 10 Aug 2016

Phishing messages typically get 5-10% response rates, but a new system has boosted its rate to 40%.John Seymour and Phil Tully, twodata scientists from the security companyZeroFOX, presented theirsystem SNAP_Rat Black Hat, a Las Vegas conference on cyber-security, on August 4. SNAP_R uses a deep neural net tostudy a person's past tweets and then mimics that person's writing style usinga Markov model, generatinga phishing tweet. So far, there is no reason to think that criminals are using a similar system, but Seymour and Tully's work show how it might be done.

Classified as: phishing, data science in the news, cyber-security, spearphishing, dialogue bots, deep neural networks, Markov model, John Seymour, Black Hat
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Published on: 5 Aug 2016

Online bullying and trolls are the darker side of social media. Twitter's Chief Executive Officer that he wantedto makeit a corporate priority todetectabuse and hate speech on Twitter.

Classified as: Yahoo, data science in the news, online bullying, trolling, word embeddings, distributional semantics, word2vec
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Published on: 2 Aug 2016

The Gatineau native and 鶹ýվ student was named the first Canadian winner of the Infiniti Engineering Academy competition on Thursday. That earns him a yearlong paid internship in Europe, with his time split evenly between the Infiniti Research Centre in Enstone, England, and the Renault Formula One racing team, which has its headquarters in Cranfield, England.

Classified as: engineering, The Gazette, Felix Lamy, Infiniti
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Published on: 30 Jul 2016

Autour combines GPS, Google Maps, public transit and other data with ambient sound to provide descriptions of businesses, landmarks and services near the user.

Classified as: CTV, autour, blind, visually impaired, jeremy cooperstock
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Published on: 30 Jul 2016

"These games are built by humans and therefore they contain all the biases of humans." -- Geography professor Rene Sieber.

Classified as: Geography, PokemonGo, rene sieber, the current
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Published on: 28 Jul 2016

A team of researchers in the Netherlands hasdeveloped the meansto store data at the atomic level. This technique would allow 502 terabytes of data to fit into one square inch. According to the authors, "[t]ranslating the two-dimensional storage density presented here to three dimensions, would ... allow the storage of the entire US Library of Congress in a cube 100 µm wide."At the moment, the memory array can operate up to a temperature of 77 K (about -210 C), meaning that the technology would be restricted to data centres capable of maintaining such temperatures.

Classified as: Nanotechnology, data science in the news, storage, Kaiff et al.
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Published on: 26 Jul 2016

reports on towns in Labrador West that are repositioning their economies for the 21st Century. These local economies once relied on mining minerals but are now housing data centres. The cheaper power and cooler air of the area make them ideal for data warehousing, since such centres use a lot of electricity and cause machines to heat up. Great North Data, a company based out of St.

Classified as: cbc news, data science in the news, data warehousing, bitcoin, Labrador
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Published on: 26 Jul 2016

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