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Janus pointed to their large Semantic Map as the main differentiator. Indeed he told us that semantic search companies “must include a comprehensive semantic map” to be successful. Is this true?
Jarus told Ars Technica that Cognition's technology is built on over 20 years of research into the semantics of the English language, and "understands" four million semantic contexts (word ...
As maps go, I'm not sure this one gives me much direction, but I really like the experiment and the researchers have done a great, generous job with sharing the results - the first interactive map ...
Cognition Technologies' new Semantic Map lets computers -- and, conceivably, evil robots -- "understand" the English language in much the same way humans do, based on word tenses and context in a ...
Neuroscientists have created interactive maps that can predict where different categories of words activate the brain. Their latest map is focused on what happens in the brain when you read stories.
Los Angeles-based Cognition Technologies today announced availability of their Semantic Map to the English language.
Subjects in the experiments behind this semantic map had to sit in an fMRI for hours at a time, listening to The Moth Radio Hour, a storytelling podcast. Later, the researchers would painstakingly ...
The semantic map is reportedly the world’s largest, and gives computers a vocabulary more than 10 times as extensive as that of a typical US college graduate. Artificial Intelligence was used to ...
The paper presents a “semantic map” revealing which parts of the brain’s cortex—meaning its outer layer, the one responsible for higher thought—respond to various spoken words.
Researchers have mapped hundreds of semantic categories to the tiny bits of the cortex that represent them in our thoughts and perceptions. What they discovered might change our view of memory.