Week Ending 6.27.2021
RESEARCH WATCH: 6.27.2021
This week was active for "Computer Science", with 1,268 new papers.
The paper discussed most in the news over the past week was "Image Cropping on Twitter: Fairness Metrics, their Limitations, and the Importance of Representation, Design, and Agency" by Kyra Yee et al (May 2021), which was referenced 83 times, including in the article Guide To Twitter’s Image Crop Analysis in Analytics India Magazine. Rumman Chowdhury (Director of software engineering at Twitter), who is not part of the study, said "We considered the trade-offs between the speed and consistency of automated cropping with the potential risks we saw in this research".
Leading researcher Ruslan Salakhutdinov (Carnegie Mellon University) came out with "Towards Understanding and Mitigating Social Biases in Language Models".
This week was very active for "Computer Science - Artificial Intelligence", with 206 new papers.
The paper discussed most in the news over the past week was by a team at Google: "MLP-Mixer: An all-MLP Architecture for Vision" by Ilya Tolstikhin et al (May 2021), which was referenced 11 times, including in the article Expire-Span: Not All Memories are Created Equal explained in Towards Data Science.
Leading researcher Ruslan Salakhutdinov (Carnegie Mellon University) came out with "Learning Language and Multimodal Privacy-Preserving Markers of Mood from Mobile Data".
This week was very active for "Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition", with 314 new papers.
The paper discussed most in the news over the past week was "Image Cropping on Twitter: Fairness Metrics, their Limitations, and the Importance of Representation, Design, and Agency" by Kyra Yee et al (May 2021)
This week was active for "Computer Science - Computers and Society", with 44 new papers.
The paper discussed most in the news over the past week was "Image Cropping on Twitter: Fairness Metrics, their Limitations, and the Importance of Representation, Design, and Agency" by Kyra Yee et al (May 2021)
Leading researcher Ruslan Salakhutdinov (Carnegie Mellon University) published "Towards Understanding and Mitigating Social Biases in Language Models".
This week was very active for "Computer Science - Human-Computer Interaction", with 39 new papers.
The paper discussed most in the news over the past week was "Image Cropping on Twitter: Fairness Metrics, their Limitations, and the Importance of Representation, Design, and Agency" by Kyra Yee et al (May 2021)
Leading researcher Ruslan Salakhutdinov (Carnegie Mellon University) came out with "Learning Language and Multimodal Privacy-Preserving Markers of Mood from Mobile Data".
This week was extremely active for "Computer Science - Learning", with 514 new papers.
The paper discussed most in the news over the past week was "Image Cropping on Twitter: Fairness Metrics, their Limitations, and the Importance of Representation, Design, and Agency" by Kyra Yee et al (May 2021)
Leading researcher Ruslan Salakhutdinov (Carnegie Mellon University) published "Learning Language and Multimodal Privacy-Preserving Markers of Mood from Mobile Data".
This week was active for "Computer Science - Multiagent Systems", with 21 new papers.
Over the past week, 16 new papers were published in "Computer Science - Neural and Evolutionary Computing".
This week was active for "Computer Science - Robotics", with 55 new papers.
The paper discussed most in the news over the past week was "Traversing Steep and Granular Martian Analog Slopes With a Dynamic Quadrupedal Robot" by Hendrik Kolvenbach et al (Jun 2021), which was referenced 13 times, including in the article Scientists Built a Walking Mars Rover That Can Climb Steep Hills in Futurism. The paper author, Hendrik Kolvenbach, was quoted saying "One of the surprise findings was that the point feet were not performing so bad on this particular slope, because of that high sinkage".
Leading researcher Sergey Levine (University of California, Berkeley) published "Model-Based Reinforcement Learning via Latent-Space Collocation".