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Campus & community, Campus news Berkeley offers its fastest-growing course - data science - online, for free By Public Affairs The fastest-growing course in UC Berkeley’s history — Foundations of Data Science — is being offered free online this spring for the first time through the campus’s online education hub, edX. [ Read more: New online course will make blockchain so clear ‘you can explain it
Wall-jumping robot is most vertically agile ever built Roboticists at UC Berkeley have designed a small robot that can leap into the air and then spring off a wall, or perform multiple vertical jumps in a row, resulting in the highest robotic vertical jumping agility ever recorded By Brett Israel Salto has a vertical jumping agility of 1.75 meters/second, which is ranks it between a bullfrog and a
Cockroach inspires robot that squeezes through cracks Roaches are even creepier when you see them disappearing through tiny crevices. But Berkeley biologists find this ability inspiration for search-and-rescue robots By Robert Sanders Our fear and disgust that cockroaches can quickly squeeze through the tiniest cracks are well-justified, say UC Berkeley scientists. Not only can they squish themsel
Research, Technology & engineering Engineers demo first processor that uses light for ultrafast communications By Sarah Yang Engineers have successfully married electrons and photons within a single-chip microprocessor, a landmark development that opens the door to ultrafast, low-power data crunching. The electronic-photonic processor chip communicates to the outside world directly using light, il
New ‘deep learning’ technique enables robot mastery of skills via trial and error. UC Berkeley researchers have developed algorithms that enable robots to learn motor tasks through trial and error using a process that more closely approximates the way humans learn, marking a major milestone in the field of artificial intelligence. They demonstrated their technique, a type of reinforcement learning
Campus & community, Campus news An online archive sheds light on WWII Japanese-American internment By Cathy Cockrell A digital archive recently launched by the Bancroft Library sheds new light on the mass internment of Japanese Americans during World War II and their resettlement immediately following the war. The Japanese American Evacuation and Resettlement Study Digital Archive is based on inte
Research, Science & environment Scientists capture first images of molecules before and after reaction By Robert Sanders Every chemist’s dream – to snap an atomic-scale picture of a chemical before and after it reacts – has now come true, thanks to a new technique developed by chemists and physicists at the University of California, Berkeley. Using a state-of-the-art atomic force microscope, the s
Research, Technology & engineering, Mind & body, Science & environment Scientists use brain imaging to reveal the movies in our mind By Yasmin Anwar Psychology and neuroscience professor Jack Gallant displays videos and brain images used in his research. Video produced by Roxanne Makasdjian, Media Relations. BERKELEY — Imagine tapping into the mind of a coma patient, or watching one’s own dream on
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