AI wins first gold at maths Olympic games; How mitochondria are linked to sleep; Famous psychology trick works on octopuses too

人工智能在数学奥林匹克竞赛中夺首金;线粒体如何与睡眠相连;著名的心理学技巧也对章鱼有效。

New Scientist Podcasts

2025-07-25

28 分钟
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单集简介 ...

Episode 313 AI has won gold at the world’s hardest maths event. For the first time, AI programs that use entirely natural language like ChatGPT, have used general reasoning to solve incredibly difficult tests at the International Maths Olympiad in Australia. Humans are still in the lead…for now. But could this be a big leap forward in the quest for artificial general intelligence? Mitochondria - famously the powerhouses of our cells - are linked to sleep in ways we never realised. In a study on fruit flies, researchers discovered that the longer they stay awake, the more damage is caused to their mitochondria. This pressure increasingly pushes the flies to go to sleep - to begin the repair cycle. They also showed ways of engineering and altering fruit fly mitochondria that could impact their sleep duration. Given how mitochondria is essential in all complex life forms - like us - could it one day lead to sleep treatments? An iconic psychology experiment has been used to trick octopuses. The rubber hand illusion has been used on people - and some other mammals - to fool them into thinking a fake hand is their own. And now it turns out octopuses are fooled just as easily. Researchers used a fake tentacle to recreate the trick - giving us a deeper insight into how octopus brains work. Chapters: (00:33) AI wins gold at maths Olympics (12:24) How mitochondria are linked to sleep (22:13) Octopus rubber hand illusion Hosted by Rowan Hooper and Penny Sarchet, with guests Alex Wilkins and Alexandra Thompson. To read more about these stories, visit https://www.newscientist.com/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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  • This episode is sponsored by Wellcome's podcast When Science Finds a Way.

  • Hello and welcome to the World, the Universe and Us, the weekly news podcast from New Scientist.

  • I'm Dr Penny Satay.

  • And I'm Dr Rowan Hooper.

  • On today's show we reveal the link between mitochondria and sleep and the link between mitochondria and Ozzy Osbourne.

  • Oh really?

  • Yes.

  • We're also hearing about a famous human psychology experiment that's been reproduced in octopuses and we're going to get into what that tells us about octopus cognition.

  • That all sounds great and we're going to start with the week's big AI news.

  • This week at the Maths Olympic Games in Australia,

  • or the International Maths Olympiad to give it its official name,

  • two artificial intelligences won a gold medal for the first time.

  • It's the first time that AI has got to this standard and given the strides that we've seen over the last year or so in AI across many aspects of our lives,

  • this is... seems like quite a big deal.

  • Maybe it heralds the first whispers of artificial general intelligence, this holy grail of AI.

  • Alex Wilkins is here.

  • Alex, fill us in on this, what's happened.

  • Tell us first what the IMO is for people who haven't heard of it.

  • Yeah, so the IMO is one of the most prestigious maths competitions in the world.

  • It's only open to 16 to 18 year olds and to enter the kind of the full thing you basically have to drop out of school,