The findings indicate that bonobos—or at least that Kanzi had—have the capacity to imagine, says Christopher Krupenye, an ...
Abstract: Single-Domain Generalization Object Detection (Single-DGOD) refers to training a model with only one source domain, enabling the model to generalize to any unseen domain. For instance, a ...
Abstract: Oriented object detection has attained remarkable progress in addressing the challenges associated with rotating invariant feature extraction. However, most existing object detection most ...
Object detection in snowy weather poses significant challenges due to degraded image quality and obscured features. This paper introduces a unified detection framework that integrates image ...
Java Essentials Volume 2 provides structured pathway from Java fundamentals to advanced application development ...
Official source code repo for AD-L-JEPA: Self-Supervised Representation Learning with Joint Embedding Predictive Architecture for Automotive LiDAR Object Detection ...
Dog owners often say that their pets understand far more than they let on. A muttered complaint or an offhand mention of a favorite toy can suddenly trigger a knowing look, a wagging tail, or a sprint ...
Some dogs learn new words by eavesdropping on their owners, reveals new research. Clever canines that have a unique talent for learning a vocabulary of toy names can pick up new words by simply ...
Clever canines that have a talent for learning vocabulary can pick up new words by simply overhearing their handlers’ conversations, say scientists. Parents and dog owners know that some words should ...
Clever canines that have a unique talent for learning a vocabulary of toy names can pick up new words by simply overhearing their handlers’ conversations, say scientists. Parents and dog owners know ...
If you've ever had to spell out words like W-A-L-K or T-R-E-A-T around a dog, you know that some dogs listen in to humans' chitchat and can pick out certain key words. Well, it turns out that some ...
When it comes to cognitive ability, not all dogs are created equal. Most dogs can learn simple action cues like “sit” or “down.” But so-called “gifted word learner” (GWL) dogs exhibit a remarkable ...