This is a guest post by George Wallis, one of my PhD students. We recently attended a seminar in which Oliver Sacks discussed his recent book ‘Hallucinations'. In this post George discusses the ways ...
Recent theoretical and empirical work on predictive processing and brain plasticity may help explain both the onset of and ...
Hallucinations are unreal sensory experiences, such as hearing or seeing something that is not there. Any of our five senses (vision, hearing, taste, smell, touch) can be involved. Most often, when we ...
Hallucination refers to when a person sees, smells, hears, feels or tastes something that does not exist. Hallucinations are a common clinical feature of schizophrenia, particularly auditory ...
People with Charles Bonnet syndrome (CBS) experience complex visual hallucinations that can seem very real. While there is no cure, people can take simple steps to reduce or sometimes stop their ...
Artificial Intelligence (AI) continues to revolutionize the way we interact with technology, offering unprecedented capabilities in fields ranging from healthcare to entertainment. However, as with ...
In his latest book Hallucinations, neurologist Oliver Sacks collects stories of individuals who can see, hear and smell things that aren't really there—such as strange voices, or collages of ...
AI success depends on whether enterprise data is ready, reachable, and close enough to the workloads that need it. In this eSpeaks episode, Dell Technologies’ Vrashank Jain explains why fragmented ...
A new scientific paper published by OpenAI deals with hallucinations. This is false information and context that large language models (LLMs) and, therefore, also AI chatbots output. All AI companies ...