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3,001 result(s) for "DALE, ROBERT"
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Imagining persons : Robert Duncan's lectures on Charles Olson
\"Robert Duncan's nine lectures on Charles Olson, delivered intermittently from 1961 to 1983, explore the modernist literary background and influences of Olson's influential 1950 essay \"Projective Verse.\" These transcribed talks pay tribute to Olson and expand our knowledge of Duncan's vision of modernist writing.\"-- Provided by publisher.
The return of the chatbots
By all accounts, 2016 is the year of the chatbot. Some commentators take the view that chatbot technology will be so disruptive that it will eliminate the need for websites and apps. But chatbots have a long history. So what's new, and what's different this time? And is there an opportunity here to improve how our industry does technology transfer?
An open map : the correspondence of Robert Duncan and Charles Olson
\"The correspondence of Robert Duncan and Charles Olson is one of the foundational literary exchanges of twentieth-century American poetry. The 130 letters collected in this volume begin in 1947 just after the two poets first meet in Berkeley, California, and continue to Olson's death in January 1970\"--Amazon.com.
GPT-3: What’s it good for?
GPT-3 made the mainstream media headlines this year, generating far more interest than we’d normally expect of a technical advance in NLP. People are fascinated by its ability to produce apparently novel text that reads as if it was written by a human. But what kind of practical applications can we expect to see, and can they be trusted?
Poetry and terror : politics and poetics in Coming to Jakarta
\"The book explores, in interview format, issues raised but not fully explored by Scott's poem Coming to Jakarta on the 1965 Indonesian massacre. In addition, Scott reflects on ways that poetry can serve as a non-violent higher politics, contributing to the evolution of human culture and thus our \"second nature.\" --Provided by publisher.
Start-up activity in the LLM ecosystem
The technical and mainstream media’s headline coverage of AI invariably centers around the often astounding abilities demonstrated by large language models. That’s hardly surprising, since to all intents and purposes that’s where the newsworthy magic of generative AI lies. But it takes a village to raise a child: behind the scenes, there’s an entire ecosystem that supports the development and deployment of these models and the applications that are built on top of them. Some parts of that ecosystem are dominated by the Big Tech incumbents, but there are also many niches where start-ups are aiming to gain a foothold. We take a look at some components of that ecosystem, with a particular focus on ideas that have led to investment in start-ups over the last year or so.
NLP in a post-truth world
We live in a post-truth world. It now matters more whether people think something is true than whether something really is true. This is dangerous, and technology is at least partly to blame. So, as technologists, how can we help to fix this?
Natural language generation: The commercial state of the art in 2020
It took a while, but natural language generation is now an established commercial software category. It’s commented upon frequently in both industry media and the mainstream press, and businesses are willing to pay hard cash to take advantage of the technology. We look at who’s active in the space, the nature of the technology that’s available today and where things might go in the future.
Navigating the text generation revolution: Traditional data-to-text NLG companies and the rise of ChatGPT
Since the release of ChatGPT at the end of November 2022, generative AI has been talked about endlessly in both the technical press and the mainstream media. Large language model technology has been heralded as many things: the disruption of the search engine, the end of the student essay, the bringer of disinformation … but what does it mean for commercial providers of earlier iterations of natural language generation technology? We look at how the major players in the space are responding, and where things might go in the future.
Design and construction of an in-plant activation cassette for transgene expression and recombinant protein production in plants
Virus-based transgene expression systems have become particularly valuable for recombinant protein production in plants. The dual-module in-plant activation (INPACT) expression platform consists of a uniquely designed split-gene cassette incorporating the cis replication elements of Tobacco yellow dwarf geminivirus (TYDV) and an ethanol-inducible activation cassette encoding the TYDV Rep and RepA replication-associated proteins. The INPACT system is essentially tailored for recombinant protein production in stably transformed plants and provides both inducible and high-level transient transgene expression with the potential to be adapted to diverse crop species. The construction of a novel split-gene cassette, the inducible nature of the system and the ability to amplify transgene expression via rolling-circle replication differentiates this system from other DNA- and RNA-based virus vector systems used for stable or transient recombinant protein production in plants. Here we provide a detailed protocol describing the design and construction of a split-gene INPACT cassette, and we highlight factors that may influence optimal activation and amplification of gene expression in transgenic plants. By using Nicotiana tabacum , the protocol takes 6–9 months to complete, and recombinant proteins expressed using INPACT can accumulate to up to 10% of the leaf total soluble protein.