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Posts by Mirco Musolesi

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These LLM-generated emails are getting good. This one summed up one of the strands of our current work perfectly and even included a very handy link for my own website.

4 weeks ago 1 0 0 0
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The Art of Computer Prompting.

www-cs-faculty.stanford.edu/~knuth/paper...

1 month ago 1 0 0 0
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Teaching "Generative Artificial Intelligence" this term. Started today's class with an example celebrating our founder. #UCL200

2 months ago 1 0 0 0
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New paper in Transactions on Machine Learning Research with
Giorgio Franceschelli: "DiffSampling: Enhancing Diversity and Accuracy in Neural Text Generation".

Paper+code+video here: tmlr.infinite-conf.org/paper_pages/...

2 months ago 0 0 0 0
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More formally, the probability is uniformly distributed across all possible weather conditions.

3 months ago 0 0 0 0
OECD AI Capability Indicators

The overall website about the OECD AI Capability Indicators project and policy work can be found here: aicapabilityindicators.oecd.org 6/6

4 months ago 0 0 0 0
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OECD AI Capability Indicators Technical Report The AIFS’ team is publishing this technical volume to showcase the methodology used to develop the OECD AI Capability Indicators, released on June 3 2025. The volume also acknowledges and addresses in...

The OECD AI Capability Indicators Technical Report has now been published and is available here: www.oecd.org/en/publicati... 5/6

4 months ago 0 0 1 0

We focused on defining AI creative capabilities - not only in the artistic sense but, perhaps more importantly, in terms of problem-solving and original thinking. This work is based on Giorgio's PhD thesis and current projects. 4/6

4 months ago 0 0 1 0

In essence, the question is how to assess the extent to which an AI system can perform a given task with a level of proficiency comparable to that of humans. 3/6

4 months ago 0 0 1 0

The current goal of the Working Group is to devise a series of metrics to quantify AI capabilities on a scale from 1 to 5 (similar to the “autonomy” scale used for assessing the capabilities of self-driving cars) in order to derive a global standard for governments, businesses, and other orgs. 2/6

4 months ago 0 0 1 0
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During the past year, our lab (in particular, Giorgio Franceschelli and myself) have been involved in the @oecd-ocde.bsky.social Working Group on AI and the Future of Skills. 1/6

4 months ago 0 0 1 0
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Rightmove added the strapline “believe it” to its logo. The reference to what an estate agent tells you is clear (don’t).

5 months ago 0 0 0 0
Comic. Someone is claiming to predict the exact date of a future earthquake. Should you listen? [flowchart: start] → NO (There are big earthquakes constantly, so if anyone ever *does* figure this out, it will be immediately obvious that their method works and then the world’s seismologists will not shut up about it. You won’t need this flowchart.)

Comic. Someone is claiming to predict the exact date of a future earthquake. Should you listen? [flowchart: start] → NO (There are big earthquakes constantly, so if anyone ever *does* figure this out, it will be immediately obvious that their method works and then the world’s seismologists will not shut up about it. You won’t need this flowchart.)

Earthquake Prediction Flowchart

xkcd.com/3165/

5 months ago 3841 518 26 17
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Forget Chatbots. You Need a Notebook. - Cal Newport Back in 2012, as a young assistant professor, I traveled to Berkeley to attend a wedding. On the first morning after we arrived, my wife ... Read more

This blogpost by Cal Newport is pretty good: "Forget Chatbots You Need a Notebook". calnewport.com/forget-chatb...

5 months ago 0 0 0 0

In fact, these look like insects and maybe they look like that to attract predators that will be able to spread them elsewhere. I would be very interested in an opinion from an expert. 2/2

5 months ago 0 0 0 0

More wonders of the natural world. Now some flowers of the plant in my office appear as if suspended in the void. This looks like a “technique” to invite pollinators. Or maybe it is a self-pollinating plant and these flowers contain seeds (?). 1/2

5 months ago 0 0 1 0
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The Singularity is Not Near.

5 months ago 0 0 0 0
Comic. [two connected spacecraft hovering in space above the Earth] Houston, the view is superb. We can see the continents spread out below us, right where they’ve been since the Earth formed. [caption] I still can’t believe we developed spaceflight before we figured out that the continents moved.

Comic. [two connected spacecraft hovering in space above the Earth] Houston, the view is superb. We can see the continents spread out below us, right where they’ve been since the Earth formed. [caption] I still can’t believe we developed spaceflight before we figured out that the continents moved.

Continents

xkcd.com/3159/

5 months ago 4612 613 68 40

Link to the source: www.bbc.co.uk/news/live/c5...

6 months ago 0 0 0 0
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And, by the way, regarding the value of a Computer Science degree in the "vibe-coding" era: one thing you learn in a good CS programme is how to design and build systems that are resilient and fault-tolerant. 2/2

6 months ago 0 0 1 0
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Re the AWS outage, it’s quite cool that the BBC interviewed Ken Birman, who knows a thing or two about distributed systems. 1/2

6 months ago 0 0 1 0
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We received the ACM UbiComp 2025 10-Year Impact Award for our paper “Trajectories of Depression: Unobtrusive Monitoring of Depressive States by means of Smartphone Mobility Traces Analysis” co-authored with the great Luca Canzian. Paper here: www.mircomusolesi.org/papers/ubico... #ubicomp2025

6 months ago 1 0 0 0
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New preprint with Charles Westphal and Stephen Hailes: "A Generalized Information Bottleneck Theory of Deep Learning". In this work, we introduce the Generalized Information Bottleneck framework, a synergy-based reformulation of the Information Bottleneck theory. arxiv.org/abs/2509.26327

6 months ago 1 0 0 0
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What the graduate unemployment story gets wrong People with a degree are faring better, not worse than their non-graduate counterparts

Lots of headlines claim graduates are more likely to be unemployed than non-graduates. Graduate unemployment panic makes good headlines, but the data says otherwise. Great analysis by @jburnmurdoch.ft.com. www.ft.com/content/ea9e...

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6 months ago 2 0 0 0

New preprint: “Complexity-Driven Policy Optimization”. The paper discusses a novel complexity-driven policy optimisation solution for efficient and robust approximation in Reinforcement Learning. Essentially, entropy alone is not sufficient, we also need "structure".

6 months ago 2 0 0 0
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The Library of Lost Maps

Book website: libraryoflostmaps.com

6 months ago 0 0 0 0
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Received a copy of “The Library of Lost Maps” by my colleague James Cheshire at @uclgeography.bsky.social in the internal mail. Really beautiful (and very interesting) book. Thanks a lot James!

6 months ago 2 1 1 0
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For the geeks among you: just discovered the Apple Calculator app has a "Programmer" mode, complete with binary, hex, and related operations.

6 months ago 3 0 0 0

The problem is still relevant - we now have Amazon delivery vans instead to play with. 2/2

6 months ago 0 0 0 0

I was thinking about this some weeks ago. The Travelling Salesman Problem (finding the shortest path through a list of cities, visiting each only once), a classic in Computer Science/Maths, is becoming something of the past without actual salesmen on the roads. 1/2

6 months ago 0 0 1 0