(Nanowerk News) Engineers have created intelligent 3D printers that can quickly detect and correct errors, even in previously unseen designs, or unfamiliar materials like ketchup and mayonnaise, by ...
Although they are computationally efficient, their suboptimal nature introduces extra algorithmic errors that can obscure true hardware performance. The theoretical alternative—maximum-likelihood ...
Researchers from University of Texas-Austin and Copenhagen Business School published a new paper in the Journal of Marketing that offers actionable guidance to managers on the deployment of algorithms ...