ΑΙhub.org
monthly digest
 

AIhub monthly digest: December 2024 – attending NeurIPS, multi-agent path finding, and tackling illegal mining


by
31 December 2024



share this:
Panda and tiger reading

Welcome to our monthly digest, where you can catch up with any AIhub stories you may have missed, peruse the latest news, recap recent events, and more. This month, we look back at our week attending NeurIPS, hear about work localising illegal mining sites using machine learning and geospatial data, and discover how a group of agents can minimise their journey length whilst avoiding collisions.

AIhub at NeurIPS 2024

We were lucky enough to attend the thirty-eighth Conference on Neural Information Processing Systems (NeurIPS 2024) which took place in Vancouver, Canada, from Tuesday 10 December to Sunday 15 December. On the first day of the event we held a session on science communication for AI researchers. It was great to see so many people there, and so many thoughtful questions following our presentation. You can find the webpage for the session here.

The 2024 awards for outstanding main track papers (and runners-up), outstanding datasets and benchmarks paper, and the test-of-time award were announced during the opening ceremony. You can find out who won here.

You can also find out what participants got up to in our two social media summaries: #NeurIPS2024 social media round-up part 1 | #NeurIPS2024 social media round-up part 2.

We’ll be posting more content from the conference over the coming weeks, so be sure to check out our NeurIPS collection page.

Interview with Andrews Ata Kangah: Localising illegal mining sites using machine learning and geospatial data

Andrews Ata Kangah is a team leader and researcher working on democratizing AI and AI solutions for environmental problems. We spoke to him about his research using machine learning and geospatial data to localise illegal mining sites in Ghana, and his experience attending the AfriClimate AI workshop at the Deep Learning Indaba.

Multi-agent path finding in continuous environments

Multi-agent path finding describes a problem where a group of agents (robots, vehicles, or even people) are each trying to get from their starting positions to their goal positions without colliding. In this blog post, Kristýna Janovská and Pavel Surynek write about their method for multi-agent path finding in continuous environments, where agents move on sets of smooth paths.

RoboCup teams up with Booster, Fourier and Unitree

The RoboCup Federation has announced new partnerships with three robotics companies: Booster Robotics, Fourier Intelligence and Unitree Robotics. The RoboCup Federation, an international initiative, uses the RoboCup competition series and challenges as a platform to promote and advance robotics and AI research. The aim is that the companies’ humanoid robot hardware will be used in future RoboCup competitions.

AI is not a “stochastic parrot,” it’s a mirror

In this interview in Vox, Shannon Vallor talks about some of the ideas from her new book, The AI Mirror. “One thing I hear in every country that I travel to to speak about AI is: Are humans really any different from AI? Aren’t we at the end of the day just predictive text machines? Are we ever doing anything other than pattern matching and pattern generation? That rhetorical strategy is actually what scares me. It’s not the machines themselves. It’s the rhetoric of AI today that is about gaslighting humans into surrendering their own power and their own confidence in their agency and freedom. That’s the existential threat, because that’s what will enable humans to feel like we can just take our hands off the wheel and let AI drive.”

How to benefit from AI without losing your human self

In this fireside chat from IEEE Computational Intelligence Society, Tayo Obafemi-Ajayi (Missouri State University) asks Hava T Siegelmann (University of Massachusetts, Amherst) about how to benefit from AI without losing your human self.

2024 AAAI / ACM SIGAI doctoral consortium interviews

Over the course of the year, we’ve had the privilege of meeting a number of the 2024 AAAI / ACM SIGAI doctoral consortium participants. In this collection we’ve compiled links to all of the interviews.

Looking back over 2024

We’ve had the opportunity to work with many talented researchers during 2024. In these two posts, we’ve collected some of our favourite interview and blog posts. AIhub interview highlights 2024 | AIhub blog post highlights 2024.


Our resources page
Our events page
Seminars in 2024
AAAI/ACM SIGAI Doctoral Consortium interview series
AAAI Fellows 2024 interview series
AI around the world focus series
New voices in AI series



tags: , , , , ,


Lucy Smith is Senior Managing Editor for AIhub.
Lucy Smith is Senior Managing Editor for AIhub.

            AIhub is supported by:



Subscribe to AIhub newsletter on substack



Related posts :

Identifying interactions at scale for LLMs

  10 Apr 2026
Model behavior is rarely the result of isolated components; rather, it emerges from complex dependencies and patterns.

Interview with Sukanya Mandal: Synthesizing multi-modal knowledge graphs for smart city intelligence

  09 Apr 2026
A modular four-stage framework that draws on LLMs to automate synthetic multi-modal knowledge graphs.

Emergence of fragility in LLM-based social networks: an interview with Francesco Bertolotti

  08 Apr 2026
Francesco tells us how LLMs behave in the social network Moltbook, and what this reveals about network dynamics.

Scaling up multi-agent systems: an interview with Minghong Geng

  07 Apr 2026
We sat down with Minghong in the latest of our interviews with the 2026 AAAI/SIGAI Doctoral Consortium participants.

Forthcoming machine learning and AI seminars: April 2026 edition

  02 Apr 2026
A list of free-to-attend AI-related seminars that are scheduled to take place between 2 April and 31 May 2026.

#AAAI2026 invited talk: machine learning for particle physics

  01 Apr 2026
How is ML used in the search for new particles at CERN?
monthly digest

AIhub monthly digest: March 2026 – time series, multiplicity, and the history of RoboCup

  31 Mar 2026
Welcome to our monthly digest, where you can catch up with AI research, events and news from the month past.

What I’ve learned from 25 years of automated science, and what the future holds: an interview with Ross King

  30 Mar 2026
We launch our new series with a conversation with Ross King - a pioneer in the field of AI-enabled scientific discovery.



AIhub is supported by:







Subscribe to AIhub newsletter on substack




 















©2026.02 - Association for the Understanding of Artificial Intelligence