AI and the Infinite Frontier of Space Exploration
By Terry Virts, Jennifer Rochlis, PhD, Zaheer Ali
Publications from the American Society for AI
By Terry Virts, Jennifer Rochlis, PhD, Zaheer Ali
By Alex Khalin
By Ed Addison, PhD
By Cosmin Ene
By Erik Britton
By Jeff Pedowitz
By Amyn Jan
By LTG Eric J. Wesley (U.S. Army, Ret.)
By Michael Groen, MS, LtGen, USMC (ret.)
By Keith Pijanowski
By Shawn N. Olds, JD
By Russ Wilcox
By Adam Ennamli
By Manas Talukdar
By Zachary Elewitz, PhD, MBA
By Paritosh Ambekar, PhD
By Kathleen Kennedy Townsend, JD
By Matthew Guggemos & Nicola Ianeselli
By Willonius Hatcher
By Faith Bradley, PhD
By Manuj Aggarwal
By Nathan R. Hill, PhD
By François Candelon
By Aaron Poynton, PhD
By Paul Daugherty
By Sherry McAllister, PhD
By Roahn Hylton
By Siwei Lyu, PhD
By Sarah Chardonnens, PhD
By Jeff Pedowitz & Matthew Guggemos
By Amanda C. Molina & Jamison Rotz
By Daniela Muhaj & Jayeeta Putatunda
By Jennifer Rochlis, PhD & Cristina Leira, PhD
By Mitzi Perdue
By Elizabeth (Liz) Ngonzi, MMH
By Reid Blackman, PhD
Platform debuts during Global Volunteer Month with practical guidance for leaders and communities.
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE — April 12, 2026 — Washington, D.C.
For Immediate Release - July 6, 2025 - San Francisco, California
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE - December 10, 2024 - Sonoma, California
A summary of a dinner with US Senators & Congressmen to discuss the future of AI in the United States
An open letter sent to the National Science Foundation's request for an "AI Action Plan"
In our evaluations, the model was found to be highly biased and highly vulnerable to generating insecure code, toxic, harmful and CBRN content.
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE - March 20, 2024 - Washington D.C.
A comparative analysis of human and AI evaluations reveals areas of agreement and variability in interpreting art.
A controversial model for distinguishing mental illness from socially disapproved preferences can help us understand the nature of AI.
© American Society for AI
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