#totalis

[ follow ]
History
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
10 hours ago

How two mathematicians created an equation that quietly runs the planet

British sailors risked their lives to retrieve Enigma codes from a sinking submarine, aiding in the deciphering of Nazi communications and shortening WWII.
#mathematics
fromMedium
2 months ago
Data science

Taking Back the Math: How Everyday Numbers Can Empower Us in an Algorithmic World

OMG science
fromTheregister
5 hours ago

Physicist proposes two-button calculator

A two-button calculator can compute all functions of a scientific calculator using a single operator, simplifying mathematical expressions significantly.
fromMedium
2 months ago
Data science

Taking Back the Math: How Everyday Numbers Can Empower Us in an Algorithmic World

Science
fromNature
3 weeks ago

Drowning in data sets? Here's how to cut them down to size

The Square Kilometre Array Observatory will generate massive data, but storage and retention pose significant challenges for researchers.
fromenglish.elpais.com
2 weeks ago

How AI giants tried to storm the last stronghold of the human mind: the math olympiads

The news of the AI's medal win was published by thousands of media outlets and chosen as one of the year's biggest scientific breakthroughs by the journal Science. And this is where the story starts to get complicated. Because the news is a lie.
OMG science
Artificial intelligence
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
4 weeks ago

As AI keeps improving, mathematicians struggle to foretell their own future

First Proof, a benchmarking initiative, is launching its second round to evaluate large language models' ability to contribute to research-level mathematics, now requiring transparency and access from participating AI companies.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 month ago

Find pi today just by flipping coins

Sometimes the reason pi shows up in randomly generated values is obvious—if there are circles or angles involved, pi is your guy. But sometimes the circle is cleverly hidden, and sometimes the reason pi pops up is a mathematical mystery!
Science
fromWIRED
1 month ago

You Can Approximate Pi by Dropping Needles on the Floor

Pi is an infinitely long decimal number that never repeats. How do we know? Well, humans have calculated it to 314 trillion decimal places and didn't reach the end. At that point, I'm inclined to accept it. I mean, NASA uses only the first 15 decimal places for navigating spacecraft, and that's more than enough for earthly applications.
OMG science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 month ago

Mathematicians find one pi formula to rule them all

For more than two millennia, mathematicians have produced a growing heap of pi equations in their ongoing search for methods to calculate pi faster and faster. The pile of equations has now grown into the thousands, and algorithms now can generate an infinitude. Each discovery has arrived alone, as a fragment, with no obvious connection to the others. But now, for the first time, centuries of pi formulas have been shown to be part of a unified, formerly hidden structure.
Science
Higher education
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

The Mathematics of Conflict Intelligence

Conflict intelligence is a dynamic capacity that evolves through adaptive responses, emotional regulation, perspective-taking, and systemic thinking rather than a fixed personality trait.
fromMedium
2 months ago

Algorithms Are Just Real Life, Formalized

Which Algorithm Is This? If you step back, this maps almost perfectly to the Top K Frequent Elements problem.We usually solve it for integers in a list. Here, the "elements" are audience profiles age and body-type combinations. First, define what an audience profile looks like: case class Profile(age: Int, height: Int, weight: Int) What we want is a function like this:
Scala
Artificial intelligence
fromTheregister
1 month ago

AI models get better at math but still get low marks

Current LLMs struggle with mathematical accuracy, with even top performers scoring C-grade equivalent on practical math benchmarks, though recent versions show modest improvements.
Television
fromWIRED
2 months ago

How Does the Hive Mind Work in 'Pluribus'?

An alien RNA-derived virus links infected humans into a radio-communicating hive mind, eliminating individuality while a small immune group resists.
fromNature
2 months ago

Forget formalism: mathematics was built on infighting and emotional turmoil

In the weeks leading up to September 1891, mathematician Georg Cantor prepared an ambush. For years he had sparred - philosophically, mathematically and emotionally - with his formidable rival Leopold Kronecker, one of Germany's most influential mathematicians. Kronecker thought that mathematics should deal only with whole numbers and proofs built from them and therefore rejected Cantor's study of infinity. "God made the integers," Kronecker once said. "All else is the work of man."
History
Higher education
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 months ago

Can you solve it? The numbers all go to 11

Eleven exhibits striking properties: two-digit prime palindrome, football-team size, palindromic multiples, a neat divisibility test, and digit-arrangement puzzles.
Artificial intelligence
fromHarvard Gazette
2 months ago

When you do the math, humans still rule - Harvard Gazette

Mathematicians launched First Proof to test AI on recently solved research problems, showing AI excels at routine tasks but struggles with creative, conceptual breakthroughs.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 months ago

How math can reveal lottery fraud

On October 1, 2022, something strange happened in the Philippines: 433 people won the jackpot in the local lottery. For this particular lotto, six numbers ranging in value from 1 to 55 were randomly selected, and the 433 winners all matched. Even more bizarre, when arranged in ascending order, the winning numbers were: 9, 18, 27, 36, 45 and 54. In other words, the winning numbers were multiples of 9 (9 1, 9 2, 9 3, etcetera).
Science
Artificial intelligence
fromWIRED
2 months ago

The Math on AI Agents Doesn't Add Up

Transformer-based LLMs have fundamental computational limitations that prevent them from reliably performing complex agentic tasks, making full automation unlikely.
OMG science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 months ago

What 6-7,' demons and The Big Bang Theory tell us about prime numbers

73 uniquely satisfies linked positional, reversal, and digit-product properties; mathematicians proved no other prime shares all these Sheldon Prime properties.
#large-language-models
fromComputerworld
2 months ago

OpenAI's GPT is getting better at mathematics

OpenAI's GPT-5.2 Pro does better at solving sophisticated math problems than older versions of the company's top large language model, according to a new study by Epoch AI, a non-profit research institute.
Artificial intelligence
[ Load more ]