Use the vitals package with ellmer to evaluate and compare the accuracy of LLMs, including writing evals to test local models.
Examples include restoring nature in the landscape at a former gravel pit, says its chairman.
Evaluating digital tools for sustainable eating, the review highlights initial positive impacts but stresses the importance ...
Who gets the job interview. Who receives public benefits. Who is flagged as high risk. Increasingly, these outcomes are shaped not by human deliberation but by algorithmic systems embedded deep within ...
The reduction in depression and anxiety symptoms 3 months after completing ten AMHSP sessions indicates a slow but meaningful benefit of the programme and supports the potential of a low-intensity, ...
Dr. James McCaffrey presents a complete end-to-end demonstration of decision tree regression from scratch using the C# language. The goal of decision tree regression is to predict a single numeric ...
Introduction Child stunting, a measure of malnutrition, is a major global health challenge affecting 148.1 million children in 2022. Global stunting rates have declined from 47.2% in 1985 to 22.3% in ...
Introduction Prescription digital therapeutics (PDTx) represent an emerging frontier in healthcare, leveraging software-based solutions to treat or manage specific medical conditions. However, despite ...
Introduction Dyspnoea is an existentially burdensome symptom in patients with advanced and progressive diseases such as cancer, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and advanced heart failure.
Learn about semivariance, a key metric for assessing a portfolio’s downside risk. Understand its formula and how to calculate potential negative variations below the mean.
From 1967 through 2002, the Pontiac Firebird and Chevrolet Camaro were “twins” on GM’s rear-wheel-drive F-body platform, then diverged when the Firebird ended and the Camaro returned in 2010 on newer ...
China is the justification for our AI policy, our defense spending, our tariffs, even our alliances. What if we’re wrong ...