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AI
1[ ey-ahy ]
noun
- artificial intelligence:
- the ability of a computer, robot, programmed device, or software application to perform operations and tasks analogous to human learning and decision making, such as recognizing speech and answering questions:
The researchers used AI to detect patterns in patients' health data.
- a computer, robot, programmed device, or software application able to perform operations and tasks analogous to human learning and decision making, such as recognizing speech and answering questions:
Help train an AI in London that needs your help in understanding the world.
- the branch of computer science involved with the design of computers, robots, programmed devices, and software applications able to perform operations and tasks analogous to human learning and decision making:
Many of our students have gone on to produce important, high-profile research in AI.
adjective
- relating to or produced with the aid of a computer, robot, programmed device, or software application able to perform operations and tasks analogous to human learning and decision making:
Growing demand for AI engineers requires more training programs.
Fully integrating AI output into our work poses numerous challenges, despite the labor it promises to eventually save.
ai
2[ ah-ee ]
noun
- a three-toed sloth, Bradypus tridactylus, inhabiting forests of southern Venezuela, the Guianas, and northern Brazil, having a diet apparently restricted to the leaves of the trumpet-tree, and sounding a high-pitched cry when disturbed.
AI
3abbreviation for
ai
4[ ahy ]
interjection
- (used as an utterance of pity, pain, anguish, etc.)
ai
1/ ˈɑːɪ /
noun
- the three-toed sloth See sloth
AI
2abbreviation for
- artificial insemination
- artificial intelligence
ai
3the internet domain name for
- Anguilla
AI
- Abbreviation of artificial insemination
- Abbreviation of artificial intelligence
Word History and Origins
Origin of AI1
Origin of AI2
Word History and Origins
Origin of AI1
Example Sentences
In the future, this AI model could speed up the diagnosis of depression, or even make it remote, and reduce the risk of subjective evaluations.
Researchers reporting in the Journal of Chemical Education prompted AI image generators for portraits of chemists.
Yet AI relies on data – and data centres need constant, reliable electricity.
With the help of tagged animals and a second AI algorithm, the scientists can now automatically locate carcasses across vast landscapes.
As our collective nervousness over AI grows each day, “The Wild Robot” emerges from the woods with a completely different take on a man-made being with the ability to learn.
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