A museum experiment in Cambridge will allow visitors to have a conversation with a dodo. Using artificial intelligence, an authentic voice is given to the extinct bird that can respond to any ...
The Mauritius dodo, a bird last seen in the 17th century, is once again "speaking" at the Cambridge Museum of Zoology, thanks ...
The world-famous Blaschka Glass Flowers receive a lot of attention at this museum – and rightly so ... specimens from the Museum of Comparative Zoology, the Harvard University Herbaria ...
A new glimpse into the natural world is being provided at the Museum of Zoology in Cambridge, with the chance to ask skeletons anything you like.
The museum’s large collection of amphibians and reptiles is one the longest maintained collections in the world, originating in the late eighteenth century. The cnidaria collections include corals, ...
The University of Cambridge's Museum of Zoology is launching an innovative AI-powered experience that allows visitors to interact with animal specimens starting from Tuesday. The AI system enables ...
Working in collaboration with the company Nature Perspectives, Jack chose the specimens to bring back to life, including dodo and whale skeletons, a taxidermied red panda and a preserved cockroach.
Looks like Night at the Museum is becoming a tad more realistic. Cambridge University’s Museum of Zoology is using AI to let dead animals, like a cockroach and a fin whale skeleton, tell their ...