If i have a human fingerprint of just the index finger ,can an ai generate the rest of the palm's prints if the AI is trained with a huge dataset of human palms and will it be accurate? | AskScience Blog

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Monday, April 4, 2022

If i have a human fingerprint of just the index finger ,can an ai generate the rest of the palm's prints if the AI is trained with a huge dataset of human palms and will it be accurate?

If i have a human fingerprint of just the index finger ,can an ai generate the rest of the palm's prints if the AI is trained with a huge dataset of human palms and will it be accurate?


If i have a human fingerprint of just the index finger ,can an ai generate the rest of the palm's prints if the AI is trained with a huge dataset of human palms and will it be accurate?

Posted: 04 Apr 2022 09:02 AM PDT

Why is oxygen paramagnetic while iron is ferromagnetic?

Posted: 04 Apr 2022 01:30 AM PDT

Ogygen and iron atoms both have unpaired electrons. Why can these unpaired electrons keep existing in iron (making it magnetic) while they can't do this in oxygen?

submitted by /u/CreeepyNL
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How do we know the Milky Way galaxy is the brightest in the Laniakea Supercluster? How is it the brightest?

Posted: 04 Apr 2022 12:40 AM PDT

Of the 100,000 to 150,000 galaxies estimated to inhabit the Laniakea Supercluster, how can we be certain that our galaxy is the brightest of them all? How is it the brightest?

submitted by /u/existenceismine
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Are there any indications by which we can determine whether a genetic modification is possible or realistic that (e.g.) could enable electric eels to consume plastic and produce currents at higher efficiency to feed a city? Is this predictable with the laws of physics other than the genetic code?

Posted: 03 Apr 2022 10:18 PM PDT

How does a gluten sensor work?

Posted: 03 Apr 2022 12:45 PM PDT

What really happens when lightning strikes stone?

Posted: 03 Apr 2022 10:02 AM PDT

I've been getting a lot of mixed reports about this issue. In one story, lightning struck a brick house and "shattered" it. In another, a stone statue of Venus de Milo was struck by lightning and the top half blew to pieces. But from what I've heard, stone isn't supposed to be a conductor. When electricity passes through something, it's because it's trying to reach something larger (the ground), right? And since the ground is mostly made of stone, the electricity disperses through it and just kind of... vanishes? That's the confusing part, and it doesn't match up with the whole "stone-shattering" effect it supposedly has.

submitted by /u/Dachimotsu
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