Top related persons:
Top related locs:
Top related orgs:

Search resuls for: "Chen Fang"


3 mentions found


Built by the hedge fund's Applied AI team, Deep Research helps analysts and portfolio managers answer complex research questions. Mostly used by investment teams, Deep Research helps analysts and PMs research stocks before making a trade and gauge the impact of global market events on a portfolio or set of stocks. Those teams send their questions to the Applied AI team, which passes them on to the bot. The goal is to release the tool firmwide by the fourth quarter, with every team accessing the tool directly. In one recent example, a PM asked Deep Research to find companies whose supply chains were affected by tariffs.
Persons: Chen Fang, Fang Organizations: Balyasny, Management, Research
The AI team at Balyasny Asset Management has been vocal about its ambitions to build an AI equivalent of an analyst, and a recently developed tool called Deep Research is getting it one step closer to its goal. Built by the hedge fund's Applied AI team, Deep Research helps analysts and portfolio managers answer complex questions to research stocks before making a trade. In one recent example, a portfolio manager asked Deep Research to find companies whose supply chains are impacted by tariffs. The Applied AI team wants to continue to level up what the bots can do. Those teams experiment with Deep Research by sending research questions to the Applied AI team to process.
Persons: , Chen Fang, Fang, Balyasny, Peter Anderson, it's, Anderson Organizations: Service, Balyasny, Management, Research, Business, Deep Research, Microsoft, Google, SEC
CNN —An unusual ancient marine reptile may have gulped down tons of shrimplike prey using a feeding technique similar to one used by some modern whales. Fang et al/Courtesy University of BristolBut there hasn’t been much evidence in the fossil record for ancient reptiles using filter feeding, until now. These structures are similar to what’s seen in baleen whales, which have strips of keratin instead of teeth. “Baleen whales have grooves along the jaws to support curtains of baleen, long thin strips of keratin, the protein that makes hair, feathers and fingernails. It’s possible that the marine reptile didn’t start out with this ability.
Persons: Hupehsuchus nanchangensis, , Long Cheng, et, Li Tian, Hupehsuchus, Zichen Fang, Michael Benton, It’s Organizations: CNN, BMC, Wuhan Center, China Geological Survey, University of Bristol, China University of Geosciences, University of Bristol’s School of Earth Sciences Locations: China, Hubei province, China University of Geosciences Wuhan
Total: 3