GBH Morning Edition host Mark Herz spoke with MIT computer science professor Marzyeh Ghassemi about AI's use in medicine.
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Advocates who deal with sexual assault, harassment commend Sask. Roughriders on Ajou Ajou firing
The team's decision will likely give future whistleblowers confidence to come forward like the women who spoke out against ...
The U.S. has killed many top Iranian officials, including its supreme leader. Multiple foreign policy and military experts said regime change is about more than changing people; it’s about changing ...
US President Donald Trump has repeatedly touted the US operations in Venezuela as a “perfect” example of how regime change can play out, drawing direct parallels between Venezuela and Iran. “What we ...
Although some U.S. airstrikes have helped improve political conditions, experts said airstrikes alone are generally not enough to bring about regime change. Usually, airstrikes combined with ground ...
This paper presents a conceptual framework for the design of personalized persuasive conversational agents to support positive behavior change. This paper leverages key theoretical models to ...
Thomas Frank during Tottenham Hotspur's 2-0 defeat against Manchester United last week James Gill - Danehouse/Getty Images Tottenham Hotspur’s decision to sack their manager after a hugely ...
Most DUI offenders self-correct, but repeat offenders require targeted screening, assessment, and treatment to address underlying substance use and behavioral causes of reoffending. Applying treatment ...
This voice experience is generated by AI. Learn more. This voice experience is generated by AI. Learn more. Traditional change models, based on stability, fail in today's volatile world of ...
Behavior is at the heart of nearly every challenge in the workplace, from leadership and fair decisions to high performance and AI adoption. But how should organizations go about influencing behavior?
Want to Change Someone’s Behavior? Understand How the Brain Builds Habits, According to Neuroscience
The research, conducted at Georgetown University Medical Center, found that “shifting levels of a brain protein called KCC2 can reshape the way cues become linked with rewards, sometimes making habits ...
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