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China's Race for Artificial Intelligence (AI) Technology

Robot scores high result on national doctor qualification test

2017-11-08 10:40

Xinhua Editor: Gu Liping

A Chinese-made robot has obtained a high score on the written test for the national doctor qualification, authorities said Monday.

The robot, co-developed by leading Chinese tech firm iFlytek and Tsinghua University, has achieved a score of 456, higher than the national pass line of 360, according to the health and family planning commission in Anhui Province.

This year, around 530,000 people across the country took the examination in August. The National Medical Examination Center released the pass line for the written test on Monday.

Watched by examination supervisors, the robot answered the same test paper at the same time as its human counterparts in a designated test room without internet access or signal. The whole process was recorded to prevent cheating, according to iFlytek.

The test showed the robotic doctor has mastered self-learning and problem solving abilities to a degree. It will be used to assist doctors in clinical diagnosis and will see patients in hospitals, residential communities and homes in the future.

http://www.ecns.cn/2017/11-08/280101.shtml
 
Tencent unveils ambitious plans for AI

2017-11-09 09:43

Global Times Editor: Li Yan

Benchmark released to guide industry development

As major Chinese Internet companies pursue the development of artificial intelligence (AI), an industry benchmark has been established, and Tencent Holdings has unveiled a multibillion-yuan plan to support start-ups while encouraging integration of AI technologies with traditional industries.

The benchmark was launched by an AI industrial base called China Voice Valley in Hefei, capital of East China's Anhui Province on Wednesday.

Over the past six years, Tencent has accumulated more than 13 million partners like software and application developers, created 25 million jobs and paid 23 billion yuan in dividends, Lin Songtao, vice president of the company, said during Tencent's seventh global partner conference held in Chengdu, capital of Southwest China's Sichuan Province on Wednesday.

"In the future, the company will focus on AI-powered technologies and further open up its platform," Lin said.

Tencent's AI lab has made significant progress in recent years, and the applications it developed have spread to various sectors such as social networks, medical services, retail finance and security products.

Apart from Tencent, other Internet companies have also been investing heavily in AI in recent years.

"We'll be the first generation coexisting with AI," Wang Yongdong, chief technology officer of Microsoft's Asia-Pacific R&D Group, told the AI World 2017 conference held in Beijing on Wednesday.

Baidu Inc, Alibaba Group Holding and Tencent, known as major players in China's Internet sector, have all been actively undertaking research and development (R&D) into AI.

For instance, using "Knowledge Graphs", an AI platform, search engine Baidu can gather vast amounts of information and organize it by using different algorithms, Wang Haifeng, vice president of Baidu, said during the Beijing conference.

About 2,000 companies in China are engaged in AI technology. Some are large-scale Internet firms while others are small-sized start-ups, Zhang Yifu, an expert from the electronic technology information research institute of the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT), told the Global Times during the Beijing conference.

"It's necessary to provide a unified benchmark for the further development of the AI industry," Zhang noted.

In July, the State Council, China's cabinet, unveiled guidelines for the development of the AI industry, which it hopes will motivate the sector to reach the same level as other advanced countries in terms of technology and applications by 2020.

AI was also highlighted in a report delivered at the opening ceremony of the 19th National Congress of the Communist Party of China on October 18, and some provincial governments have announced favorable policies to encourage AI development.

"Different regions have their own edges. For example, Shenzhen [in South China's Guangdong Province] has Tencent and Huawei, and Hangzhou [in East China's Zhejiang Province] has Alibaba," Zhang said, noting that the benchmark will provide a fair evaluation for the overall sector.

By using indicators such as business scale, policy environment, innovative capability and technology support, the AI benchmark can be a reference for top policymakers when granting funds to technology companies, he said.

The benchmark, which is supervised by the research institute of MIIT, could become a national guideline.

Although AI technologies have been booming in recent years, some major challenges exist, industry representatives said during the conference.

For instance, companies have been competing with each other in terms of market scale, which explains Broadcom's bid offer for Qualcomm, Shao Yang, president of strategic marketing at Huawei's consumer business division, told the conference.

"When China embraces the AI boom, we hope companies will not end up 'burning cash' but will invest in a more efficient way," he said.

http://www.ecns.cn/business/2017/11-09/280237.shtml
 
Tencent unveils ambitious plans for AI

2017-11-09 09:43

Global Times Editor: Li Yan

Benchmark released to guide industry development

As major Chinese Internet companies pursue the development of artificial intelligence (AI), an industry benchmark has been established, and Tencent Holdings has unveiled a multibillion-yuan plan to support start-ups while encouraging integration of AI technologies with traditional industries.

The benchmark was launched by an AI industrial base called China Voice Valley in Hefei, capital of East China's Anhui Province on Wednesday.

Over the past six years, Tencent has accumulated more than 13 million partners like software and application developers, created 25 million jobs and paid 23 billion yuan in dividends, Lin Songtao, vice president of the company, said during Tencent's seventh global partner conference held in Chengdu, capital of Southwest China's Sichuan Province on Wednesday.

"In the future, the company will focus on AI-powered technologies and further open up its platform," Lin said.

Tencent's AI lab has made significant progress in recent years, and the applications it developed have spread to various sectors such as social networks, medical services, retail finance and security products.

Apart from Tencent, other Internet companies have also been investing heavily in AI in recent years.

"We'll be the first generation coexisting with AI," Wang Yongdong, chief technology officer of Microsoft's Asia-Pacific R&D Group, told the AI World 2017 conference held in Beijing on Wednesday.

Baidu Inc, Alibaba Group Holding and Tencent, known as major players in China's Internet sector, have all been actively undertaking research and development (R&D) into AI.

For instance, using "Knowledge Graphs", an AI platform, search engine Baidu can gather vast amounts of information and organize it by using different algorithms, Wang Haifeng, vice president of Baidu, said during the Beijing conference.

About 2,000 companies in China are engaged in AI technology. Some are large-scale Internet firms while others are small-sized start-ups, Zhang Yifu, an expert from the electronic technology information research institute of the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT), told the Global Times during the Beijing conference.

"It's necessary to provide a unified benchmark for the further development of the AI industry," Zhang noted.

In July, the State Council, China's cabinet, unveiled guidelines for the development of the AI industry, which it hopes will motivate the sector to reach the same level as other advanced countries in terms of technology and applications by 2020.

AI was also highlighted in a report delivered at the opening ceremony of the 19th National Congress of the Communist Party of China on October 18, and some provincial governments have announced favorable policies to encourage AI development.

"Different regions have their own edges. For example, Shenzhen [in South China's Guangdong Province] has Tencent and Huawei, and Hangzhou [in East China's Zhejiang Province] has Alibaba," Zhang said, noting that the benchmark will provide a fair evaluation for the overall sector.

By using indicators such as business scale, policy environment, innovative capability and technology support, the AI benchmark can be a reference for top policymakers when granting funds to technology companies, he said.

The benchmark, which is supervised by the research institute of MIIT, could become a national guideline.

Although AI technologies have been booming in recent years, some major challenges exist, industry representatives said during the conference.

For instance, companies have been competing with each other in terms of market scale, which explains Broadcom's bid offer for Qualcomm, Shao Yang, president of strategic marketing at Huawei's consumer business division, told the conference.

"When China embraces the AI boom, we hope companies will not end up 'burning cash' but will invest in a more efficient way," he said.

http://www.ecns.cn/business/2017/11-09/280237.shtml

China's BAT is creating an amazing new economy, at least, on par with the advanced Western counterparts.

That's amazing, given that China has started industrialization (in the modern sense) quite late and the West had comparative advantage.

Give the government of China a round of applause, which enabled and laid down the conditions for national tech champions to thrive and prosper.

No other developing nation enjoy an internet industry as complete as that of China. Good, pragmatic government+hard working, smart people.
 
iFlytek releases new AI products
By Guo Yiming


The 10 new products were displayed during the company's annual product release conference with the theme of "AI: Enabling Industries, Empowering Individuals."

AI has been adopted in an increasing number of daily activities and used across many industries, said Liu Qingfeng, chairman of iFlytek.

He said the company's AI-enabled platform had so far been used over four billion times by a wide range of people; 20 percent of the applications involved education, and the rest covered social communications, shopping, medicine, etc.

The company's robotic medical assistant recently passed China's national qualification test for doctors with a score of 456, much higher than the national pass mark of 360. The robot will be used to assist doctors in clinical diagnosis, the company said.

Liu and his team believe half the current jobs in existence would be replaced by AI over the next 10 years.

While some pessimists, like business magnate Elon Musk, have warned of the looming threat of AI and possible outbreak of a third world war resulting from its development, Liu thinks constant technological breakthroughs in this field, if well-regulated, will relieve ordinary people from repetitious and boring work, allowing make them to focus on meaningful, interesting and creative tasks.

The company, which has prospered on its voice recognition technology, is heavily involved in such sectors as medicine, the judiciary and education, and has incorporated its AI-enabled system in translation, automobiles, toys and smart home appliances.

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iFlytek chairman Liu Qingfeng gives a speech during the company's annual product release day on Nov. 9, 2017. [Photo provided to China.org.cn]


http://china.org.cn/business/2017-11/10/content_41872338_2.htm
 
Writing gets new tech edge from AI

2017-11-13 10:03

China Daily Editor: Huang Mingrui

Handwriting, which has evolved over aeons, is receiving a tech edge in China from the boom in artificial intelligence or AI-enabled educational services.

Thanks to the rapid advances in image-recognition technologies, emerging smart hardware is reshaping how China's 188 million pupils will write and interact with teachers.

T-One, an AI-enabled smart pen, can instantly digitalize students' handwritten notes, automatically evaluating their answers, potentially reducing the workload of both teachers and students.

T-One was developed by Master Learner, a Beijing-based online education startup which has a valuation of more than $100 million.

Equipped with a built-in mini camera, the pen can click up to 240 images per second, and store content handwritten on 400 A4-sized pages or equivalent.

When students write with the smart pen on a piece of specially produced paper, which is printed with an invisible dot code pattern, the high-speed camera at the front of the pen can capture the movement of the nib. And the pressure sensor will record all the information such as writing time and speed, motion trajectory and page number.

Information thus collected is transmitted via Bluetooth to computers or other hand-held devices like tablets, which are equipped with Master Learner's "super teacher" system. The system can automatically review students' homework on behalf of teachers.

The system is said to be able to evaluate answers. Zhang Kailei, founder and CEO of Master Learner, said, "Handwriting has always played an irreplaceable role as a medium of interaction between teachers and students. Unlike typing on the keyboard, writing on paper is still the most preferred way in Chinese classrooms and examinations."

According to him, the smart pen is meant to digitalize the education process, and boost efficiency while protecting the traditional writing habits.

"We are starting to mass-produce the smart pen," Zhang said, without disclosing its price.

Smart pens function as information collectors in the education process. In the future, their appearance, weight and feel will be similar to that of conventional pens, analysts said.

Xiong Bingqi, vice-president of the 21st Century Education Research Institute, said education would be one of the industries to be revolutionized by AI, which would help both teachers and students, but the essence of education won't change.

http://www.ecns.cn/business/2017/11-13/280688.shtml
 
Alibaba’s AI Fashion Consultant Helps Achieve Record-Setting Sales
AI will blur the line between online and offline retail.
On the third floor of a shopping mall in the heart of Shanghai last week, Xiaolan He, a woman in her 50s, took an olive-green down jacket to a fitting room. To her surprise, she found a screen about the size of a large poster on the wall. It recognized the item of clothing in her hands through a tiny sensor embedded in the garment, and showed several options for matching items that she could flip through like a photo album. The screen, and the system that powers it, make up FashionAI—which essentially became He’s personal stylist.

FashionAI received its first big wave of customers on Saturday during Singles’ Day, a Chinese shopping festival started by Alibaba in 2009 and held on November 11 each year. This year’s event set a record, with a staggering $25 billion worth of goods sold. And the company hopes the technology it rolled out could help it reinvent retail using artificial intelligence.


--> Alibaba’s AI Fashion Consultant Helps Achieve Record-Setting Sales - MIT Technology Review
 
China is building a police station powered by AI, not humans

by TRISTAN GREENE — 4 days ago in ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE

wuhan1.jpg

Credit: Caijing Neican

China this week announced an AI-powered unmanned police station will open in one of its capitol cities, proving once again that no other country quite embraces artificial intelligence like it does.

The station appears to be designed with driver and vehicle related matters in mind, making it more like a Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV) than a cop shop. It will provide driver’s examinations via simulator, registration services, and feature advanced face-scanning technology developed by Tencent, according to a report from Chinese financial paper Caijing Neican.

wuhan2.jpg

Credit: Caijing Neican

Setting aside the myriad of law enforcement related implications, there’s still plenty to unpack concerning the idea of unmanned government buildings. This station will be open to the public 24/7, and since citizens will presumably be dealing with dedicated hardware there should be far less points of failure than web-based solutions tend to have.

Can you imagine what it would be like to deal with government bureaucracy without becoming frustrated?

Citizens will use their face as an ID Card. While the report wasn’t specific, it seems to indicate that those using the services won’t have to sit at stations and sign up for accounts, or download apps to generate logins. Image recognition AI will have access to all the pertinent information needed — it all sounds very elegant and smooth.

I have to admit I’m a little jealous. As an American who lives pretty far off the beaten path, I basically have to take half a day off work in order to conduct any business at the DMV. I’m eager for a future where I can get my photo ID renewed at 7PM on a Sunday without having to fill out any paperwork or talk to government employees.

And, while there’s a lot of understandable fear that robots will take positions away from people, sometimes humans aren’t the best suited candidates for a job.

In the US, places like the department of Veteran’s Affairs can’t possibly get any worse if we start replacing government employees who fail to meet the meekest of taxpayers’ expectations with more capable machines. Maybe we should try it out, like China, and see what happens.

https://thenextweb.com/artificial-i...ng-a-police-station-powered-by-ai-not-humans/
 
AI-Powered Microscope Counts Malaria Parasites in Blood Samples
By Jeremy Hsu
Posted 13 Nov 2017 | 8:00 GMT

Mjk4MTkwNg.jpeg

Photo: Andrew H. Kim/Intellectual Ventures
Roxanne Rees-Channer, a research biochemist, inserts a cassette into the EasyScan GO at the Hospital for Tropical Diseases in London, where the AI-powered microscope is being tested.


Today, a Chinese manufacturer and a venture backed by Bill Gates will announce plans to commercialize a microscope that uses deep learning algorithms to automatically identify and count malaria parasites in a blood smear within 20 minutes. AI-powered microscopes could speed up diagnosis and standardize detection of malaria at a time when the mosquito-borne disease kills almost half a million people per year.

An experimental version of the AI-powered microscope has already shown that it can detect malaria parasites well enough to meet the highest World Health Organization microscopy standard, known as competence level 1. That rating means that it performs on par with well-trained microscopists, although the researchers note that some expert microscopists can still outperform the automated system.

That previous research, presented at the International Conference on Computer Vision [pdf] in October, has inspired the Global Good Fund—a partnership between the company Intellectual Ventures and Bill Gates—and a Chinese microscope manufacturer called Motic to take the next big commercialization step.

--> AI-Powered Microscope Counts Malaria Parasites in Blood Samples - IEEE Spectrum
 
2017 a key year for China’s AI industry as it begins to outperform the US in tech breakthroughs
By Chen Qingqing Source:Global Times Published: 2017/11/13 17:23:39

China’s quest for global AI dominance

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A boy holds hands with an AI robot at a conference held in Beijing on August 24. Photo: IC

China and the US are now the two world leaders in pursuing AI development. 2017 in particular has been a key year for China's AI industry, as more and more domestic companies have been making technological breakthroughs within the sector and as the application of AI has been penetrating all aspects of daily life in China. During the AI World 2017 summit held in Beijing on Wednesday, experts discussed what milestones the domestic AI industry has reached so far.

While Saudi Arabia was busy considering a female robot named Sophia as a Saudi citizen, some Chinese companies were busy advancing their artificial intelligence (AI) technologies.

For example, one company unveiled the first robot that can work as a certified doctor in a Chinese hospital, while another announced an ambitious multibillion-yuan AI plan.

For both investors and tech geeks, 2017 is the year China is experiencing a boom in its AI industry, representatives said during the recent AI World 2017 conference, an industry event held on an annual basis.

Three factors - massive data, cloud computing and strong algorithms - have led to the rise of AI technologies, particularly in China, Wang Yongdong, vice president of Microsoft's Asia-Pacific R&D Group, told the audience at the event held at Beijing's National Convention Center on Wednesday.

In 2016, Microsoft established an AI business division to bring scientists and technicians together to improve both basic infrastructure building and services, Wang noted. "AI is not a topic in the lab anymore, it's now in every industry… and we'll be the first generation to co-exist with AI."

China's three Internet giants - Baidu, Alibaba and Tencent - have all demonstrated their passions for pursuing AI technologies.

Starting out as just a search engine, Baidu Inc has been tapping into the AI sector for about seven years, Wang Haifeng, head of the company's AI department, was quoted as saying in an e-mail sent to the Global Times on Wednesday.

And the company's research presence has expanded from just natural language processing and machine learning to a multi-layer AI ecosystem.

Meanwhile, Tencent's image recognition technology is being widely used by Chinese car-hailing services provider Didi Chuxing, according to a document the Internet firm sent to the Global Times on Wednesday. Didi has also introduced a credit-scoring system to verify drivers' information, the accuracy rate of which could soon reach 99.5 percent, the document noted.

In July, Alibaba also unveiled its AI ambitions by outlining a slew of detailed targets in cloud computing, high-performance computing and other AI-related projects.

Many industry representatives have applauded the Chinese government's efforts to integrate AI into the strategy of a national development plan, which has become a major driving force for the industry as a whole.

After the State Council, China's cabinet, in July released AI guidelines and set a 2020 target, some provincial governments came up with their own plans to develop local AI industries.

"For now, there are more than 2,000 enterprises in the country engaged in AI technologies, and different regions have their own edges," Zhang Yifu, an expert from the Electronic Technology Information Research Institute of the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, told the Global Times Wednesday.

"With the central government's guidelines, the AI sector has been attracting a lot of attention. Authorities will soon grant special funds to some AI projects," he said.

China's "AI 2.0" blueprint was incorporated into the key 2030 scientific and technological innovative projects led by the Ministry of Science and Technology in February.

With strong central government support, China is outperforming with regard to the output of academic papers on AI, and some research teams have scored highly in globally recognized AI competitions, helping the country to rank No.1 ahead of the US and India in AI global power, Yang Jing, the host of the AI World 2017 summit, told the Global Times.

Increasing global presence

More and more China-based research teams have been taking over global AI competitions.

In April, a joint laboratory between the Harbin Institute of Technology in Northeast China's Heilongjiang Province and Hefei-based AI firm iFlytek in East China's Anhui Province took the lead on Stanford reading comprehension tasks, Hu Yu, executive director of iFlytek, noted during the conference.

In a recent Microsoft Common Objects in Context dataset studying object recognition on October 29, Beijing-based Megvii Technology Inc beat its foreign competitors such as Facebook and Google, ranking first.

"China, with its huge population that can generate a tremendous volume of data, has now become the only one country that can be compared with the US in terms of AI development," Shao Yang, president of strategic marketing at Huawei's consumer business diion, said at the conference.

China was ranked as the top country in terms of numbers of AI publications cited worldwide in 2015, followed by the US and India, worldwide management consultancy McKinsey said in a report released in April.

Although China does not yet have the same kind of vibrant AI ecosystem as the US, the country is on a par with others in terms of algorithm development, particularly in voice recognition and targeted advertising, the report noted.

Optimizing core chips

While Google's tensor processing unit (TPU), a cloud system combined with software and hardware designed for machine learning, has been rattling the AI industry over the past year, more questions have been raised regarding which cutting-edge AI platforms, such as graphics processing unit (GPU) or field-programmable gate array (FPGA), are more suitable for deep learning.

"It's hard to design a specific platform for the purpose of 'training' AI systems, we always expect maximized flexibility in an algorithm. So the best model is likely to be equipped with both CPU [central processing unit] and GPU," said Hu Leijun, vice president of Chinese information technology firm Inspur.

The core technology in the AI sector is based on computing capacity, but sustainability should also be built on a friendly ecosystem, Wang Zai, vice president of Chinese AI chipmaker Cambricon Technologies Corp, said at the conference.

The company was the first "unicorn" in China's AI semiconductor sector to be worth more than $1 billion. After it released the first AI chip in the country in 2016, it teamed up with Huawei and found a way to commercialize its core technologies.

"As the smartphone maker's flagship product Mate 10 is equipped with Cambricon's neural processing unit, we have to constantly upgrade our technologies to improve user loyalty," Wang said.

Over the next five years, China's AI will make even more major breakthroughs in empowering industries, Yang noted.

"But it might lag behind in developing open-source software as well as general chips," she said.

Also, the US has a more robust AI ecosystem than China, industry representatives noted during the conference. In terms of basic research, US scholars demonstrate much deeper study and understanding of fundamental fields, for example, the study of math.

"Chinese scientists are very smart, but some are too eager to turn their research into profits," said Micree Zhan, CEO of Beijing-based custom chip manufacturer Bitmain.
 
Shanghai’s AI sector set to flourish

2017-11-15 14:29

Shanghai Daily Editor: Huang Mingrui

Shanghai's artificial intelligence industry revenue will hit 100 billion yuan ($15.2 billion) by 2020, and likely become the city's new growth engine, top government officials said yesterday.

It will be a big market because AI is set to integrate with many sectors, including finance, transport, agriculture, healthcare and medical and automotive industries.

Shanghai plans to incubate AI "unicorns," which are private firms with market value of over US$1 billion each, Chen Mingbo, chairman of the Shanghai Municipal Commission of Economy and Information Technology, said.

The city will build six industrial zones focusing on AI applications, establish a government-backed fund and open up data from government and telecommunications carriers. By 2020, Shanghai will be home to 10 global AI giants, according to a new government AI blueprint released yesterday.

"Shanghai doesn't have BAT (Baidu, Alibaba and Tencent) now but I am confident we will own world-class AI unicorns in the future," Chen said during a city government-held conference.

Open data, high-end talent and eco-systems covering finance and information infrastructure are Shanghai's unique advantages, Chen added.

So far, Shanghai has opened up 17,000 categories of government data containing 260,000 projects, covering e-government and telecom data — more than other Chinese cities have released.

Shanghai firms have invested heavily in intelligent connection, robotics, smart devices and industrial-use sensors based on advanced smart manufacture and chip industries.

Meanwhile, Shanghai is drafting plans to attract overseas AI giants to set up facilities in the city as AI is a "globalization industry," Chen added.

http://www.ecns.cn/business/2017/11-15/281055.shtml
 
Alibaba's AI-powered fashion consultant serves up suggestions from your dressing room

2017-11-15 13:28 CGTN Editor: Mo Hong'e

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Daniel Zhang, CEO of Alibaba Group. (Photo provided to CGTN)

Chinese online retail giant Alibaba tested its AI-powered deep learning machine on "Double 11", or Singles' Day, marking its move into the physical retailing industry.

This year's Double 11 saw 25 billion U.S. dollars in sales, quadruple the sales on Black Friday in the U.S. last year. While shopping online made up the majority of sales, FashionAI, Alibaba's AI machine, debuted in 13 stores across China to play its part in the annual shopping spree.

The machine is a full size interface installed in fitting rooms of brick-and-mortar stores to give shoppers suggestions. When customers bring in clothing items of their choices, the machine will recognize the items through the sensors embedded in the tags and recommend matching items. Shoppers can go through the suggestions on the screen like flipping through a photo album. They can also summon a store clerk to bring in items by pressing a button on the screen.

FashionAI, developed by a team within Alibaba, is able to offer a seamlessly integrated online and offline shopping experience for shoppers. The machine has learned to recognize millions of items and styles on Alibaba's shopping sites including Taobao.com.

The company's CEO, Daniel Zhang, told MIT Tech Review that Alibaba is seeking to "digitize the offline retail world."

Unlike the store clerks, FashionAI can remember thousands of millions of customers' tastes, which make physical shopping experience less tedious and make up for a setback in online shopping, where people cannot try on the clothes.

By including store staff service as a feature, the robotic consultant will not replace human in the jobs.
 
Courts embrace AI to improve efficiency

2017-11-16 10:05 China Daily Editor: Huang Mingrui

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Xiao Fa, a robot assistant, is surrounded by officials during its first day at Beijing No 1 Intermediate People's Court last month. (Zou Hong/China Daily)

Robots and online databases are increasingly being used to bolster the judicial system, as Cao Yin reports.

China's courts are embracing new technology and artificial intelligence in a bid to speed up judicial procedures and ensure that verdicts are more accurate and equitable.

Last month, the lawsuit center at Beijing No 1 Intermediate People's Court attracted widespread attention when a robot called Xiao Fa was put into operation.

Members of the public and court officials can ask the robot questions verbally and obtain a spoken reply, and also make queries via a regular computer keyboard or by writing Chinese characters on its screen on it's front, and receive a printout.

"Xiao Fa attracts a lot of attention, partly as a result of its appearance, but mainly because it can provide essential details, such as how to bring a lawsuit, and also retrieve case histories, verdicts and laws. It reduces our workload and improves the efficiency of our services," said Zhao Lan, head of the lawsuit center.

The robot, which has a vaguely humanoid appearance and boasts speech circuits, was designed by Aegis, a technology company in Nanjing, Jiangsu province. It first came to public attention in July, after undergoing six months of tests.

It is being used at more than 100 courts nationwide, but its use is expected to become more widespread rapidly. However, at a cost of 50,000 yuan to 150,000 yuan ($7,528 to $22,585), depending on size, Xiao Fa isn't cheap.

Aegis just one of a number of businesses in the internet and technology sectors applying AI to the legal sector. For example, Wu Song Network Technology Co unveiled Fa Xiaotao, a robotic research assistant, in October last year. Unlike Xiao Fa, it is rarely used in courts.

Du Xiangyang, CEO and founder of Aegis, stressed the differences between the robot assistants.

"Fa Xiaotao mainly serves law firms and company lawyers, while Xiao Fa is used by litigants, judges and court officials. We want our robot to help solve disputes in a way that people find easy to understand," he said.

Legal assistance

When people are investigating their legal rights or considering bringing a lawsuit, some consult lawyers, while others look for answers on the internet, but neither method is perfect, according to Du.

"Most answers provided by search engines are based on other people's experiences, and are not professional opinions, while consulting a lawyer costs a lot of money," said the 37-year-old, who majored in business management.

Xiao Fa is designed to solve both problems because its database contains authorized judgments and its services are free.

In addition to using Aegis' robots in court centers, the public can also search for information via the company's WeChat account, which was established in July.

"It's a cloud computing platform which is aimed at providing more convenient legal services for users," Du said.

For example, if someone sustains injuries in a traffic accident, the platform can provide information about procedures, such as how to contact the police and request to see relevant footage captured by surveillance cameras.

"The public has given a warmer welcome to our WeChat platform than to our robots because the online platform can provide information at any time," Du said, adding that the system is linked to more than 350 judicial authorities, including courts and justice bureaus.

Company statistics show that the platform receives more than 30,000 requests every day, and can provide immediate answers for 85 percent of the questions.

Both Xiao Fa and the WeChat platform have access to a database that is constantly updated and contains details of more than 40,000 legal procedures, and answers to about 30,000 frequently asked legal questions. It also holds information about more than 7,000 laws and 5 million cases.

"We build a computer algorithm to seek answers in the database in line with the questions, but we only provide possible solutions, not model answers," Du said.

He compared Xiao Fa with court officials who assist both judges and litigants.

"It helps litigants to understand their disputes, while its responses to legal queries can provide judges with more time to work on complicated cases," he said.

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A robot is available to help customers at a store that sells legal books in Beijing owned by the Supreme People's Court, China's highest legal chamber. (Zhao Chengshun/China Daily)

A 'smart' friend

Jiang Youyi, CEO of Wu Song, said Fa Xiaotao is programmed to select attorneys from a database of more than 60,000 lawyers who have experience in various fields. So, if a company has a problem related to contract law, the robot can provide details of lawyers for hire who have acted in similar cases.

Wu Song plans to focus the robot on providing companies with advice in a range of legal fields.

So far, it has provided services for about 10,000 companies, and its database contains details of more than 43 million verdicts, he said.

Relevant information

By contrast, Xiao Fa is designed to provide advice to individuals, according to Du: "Its algorithm is designed to reflect the most-frequently-asked questions in specific regions to ensure the answers it provides are relevant and accurate."

For example, the Xiao Fa robot in Shenzhen, Guangdong province, which is home to a large number of migrant workers, is programmed to provide employees with information about labor-related disputes, while the robots used in Beijing's courts focus mainly on civil and commercial law, he said.

"As a friend of the public, the robot must understand their problems and suit its searches to their cases," he said. "We're also studying how laws can be explained more easily, because regular people rarely understand concepts when the language is too complex or legalistic."

Du, a native of Jinhua, Zhejiang province, started Aegis shortly after graduating from Nanjing University in 2006, despite having no experience of either computing or the law.

First, he used big data to analyze public responses to judgments made by a court in Nanjing. "At the time, I was interested in the combination of the internet and laws, realizing it would be significant in both fields," he said.

In the past decade, he has witnessed the growing influence of technology in the legal sector, and his original team of three has grown into a company with more than 120 employees.

Although he believes that AI's time in the legal spotlight has definitely arrived, he dismissed the notion that robots will eventually replace lawyers.

"The goal of providing justice by upgrading technologies does not mean lawyers will disappear. However, attorney's assistants may be replaced because robots can easily search for case materials and locate specific laws. I believe AI will bring many more changes," he said.

"I suggest that people consult a lawyer for all complicated disputes, such as criminal cases, because they are affected by many things, such as emotions, which robots cannot understand."

Future challenges

Most people engaged in the AI sector are age 30 or younger. "Their innovative attitude and passion push forward technological change in the sector," Du said.

He noted that the average age of his employees is 28, and he employs twice as many technicians than people who to collate lists of laws and legal definitions.

He Weican, 22, a law graduate from Guangdong University of Finance, said his job is a little like "fighting monsters. New problems are always emerging in the AI industry. What we do is figure them out and combat them by updating the technology. It's fascinating."

For Wang Yizhen, a technician with Aegis, the challenge is the most rewarding aspect of his job.

"Explaining difficult laws through specific computer algorithms is a real challenge for me, but if I can solve the problems more people will benefit," the 25-year-old said.

He added that no one can predict how the growth of AI will change the world, but he and his colleagues are determined to play their part.

"Using technology and the law to help others will remain our long-term goal," he said.

http://www.ecns.cn/2017/11-16/281170.shtml
 
Qualcomm invests in Chinese AI facial recognition startup SenseTime
November 15, 2017 / 3:56 PM / a day ago

BEIJING (Reuters) - Chinese artificial intelligence (AI) startup SenseTime Group said on Wednesday it has sealed an investment from chipmaker Qualcomm Inc as part of a funding round that will close later this year.

SenseTime and Qualcomm had announced a strategic tie last month to collaborate on AI, which will see SenseTime’s proprietary algorithms deployed in smart devices.

Qualcomm, in a statement, confirmed the investment in SenseTime. The two firms did not disclose the size of the investment.

Reuters reported earlier in November that SenseTime plans to raise about $500 million in a new funding round, in what would be the biggest ever such fundraising by an AI startup. The fundraising will value SenseTime at about $2 billion and has drawn interest from prospective investors, including Singapore state investor Temasek [TEM.UL], the report said.

The startup is one of several AI facial recognition firms in Greater China that are rapidly raising capital from local and foreign investors amid a multibillion dollar global drive to develop advanced facial recognition technology.

It raised $410 million in July in a funding round led by its main backer, Chinese buyout firm CDH Investments, and China’s state-backed fund Sailing Capital.

SenseTime is developing technology that employs AI to quickly identify and analyze identities using cameras, and has been used in limited tests by Chinese authorities to track and capture suspects in public spaces such as airports and festivals.

The startup, which is based between Beijing and Hong Kong, counts 40 local Chinese governments as clients. It is seeking to expand overseas, including possible plans for an ASEAN headquarters in Singapore.

Qualcomm said earlier this month it signed $12 billion worth of deals with three Chinese mobile handset makers on the sidelines of a state visit to Beijing by U.S. President Donald Trump. The chipmaker is facing a $103 billion takeover bid from rival Broadcom Ltd, which it rejected on Monday.


Code:
http://www.reuters.com/article/us-sensetime-fundraising-qualcomm/qualcomm-invests-in-chinese-ai-facial-recognition-startup-sensetime-idUSKBN1DF0HE?il=0

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Facial recognition firm Megvii raises $460m

By Justin Lee
November 1, 2017

Chinese facial recognition startup Megvii, the developer of Face++ facial recognition software, has raised $460 million in its latest financing round from several investors including a Chinese state fund, Ant Financial and Foxconn Technology, according to a Reuters report.

A previous round of financing last December valued Face++ at $2 billion. For that round, Megvii raised at least $100 million from several investors led by Foxconn Technology Group and CCB International Holdings Ltd.

The Beijing-based startup developed Alipay’s “scan your face to pay” face recognition feature.

The latest funding round was led by the China State-owned Venture Capital Fund — a 200 billion yuan ($30.17 billion) state-controlled fund set up in 2016 to invest in the country’s startups — as well as existing investors Alibaba Group Holding Ltd affiliate Ant Financial and Foxconn.

Rounding out the group of investors are Russia-China Investment Fund, a joint venture of sovereign wealth funds, and South Korea’s SK Group, according to the source, who asked not to be named.

The funding round of Face++ comes as the country is seeing a significant boom in facial recognition startups.

In July, Sensetime Group raised $410 million from Chinese investors, which, at the time, was reportedly the largest single financing round for any artificial intelligence company.


Code:
http://www.biometricupdate.com/201711/facial-recognition-firm-megvii-raises-460m
 
Firms launch AI clinic alliance to meet growing demand

2017-11-17 10:18 Global Times Editor: Li Yan

High-tech medical diagnosis set to meet growing demand

Several Chinese tech startups and hospitals formed the first alliance for artificial intelligence (AI) application in healthcare on Wednesday, with the aim of meeting growing demand for medical services in the country.

Zhejiang University, along with several hospitals across the country and online medical service provider We Doctor Group, jointly launched the alliance on Wednesday in Hangzhou, capital city of Zhejiang and set up special funds for AI-related clinical and medical projects.

"The move aims to push forward AI adoption in the healthcare sector in China, and enhance the connection among hospitals, research institutions and investors," Wu Jian, a professor specializing in AI medical services at Zhejiang University, told the Global Times on Thursday.

AI is changing the landscape of medical services in China, Wu noted. "For example, machine learning algorithms can be used in improving the accuracy of medical imaging and diagnostic procedures."

With the help of breakthroughs in some major areas including image recognition, deep learning and neural networks, AI has become vital disruptive technology for the healthcare sector. In 2016, the value of AI-related healthcare deals soared 31 percent year-on-year to $794 million across the globe, according to industry consultancy CB Insights.

There were also a record amount of healthcare AI deals in the second quarter of 2017, mainly boosted by four firms in India and three in China funded by venture capital firms such as Sequoia Capital China and Northwest Venture Partners.

AI adoption will help accelerate reform and innovation in medical services in China, and tackle issues such as the shortage of nursing, particularly in family healthcare. In China, primary-care doctors account for only about 7 percent of the total number of doctors, much lower than the percentage in advanced economies where the proportion is 30 percent to 50 percent, so smart healthcare products can play the role of filling this gap, We Doctor said in a document sent to the Global Times.

The company has set up a cloud base for healthcare documents, which can be connected with smart wearable devices to monitor blood pressure, heart rate and sleep patterns.

Major breakthroughs

Abundant data and high-speed computing capacity have provided a platform for AI technologies to be used in different scenarios.

Also, the increasing need for healthcare services in China generates a large amount of data, which can be used for training purposes in labs. And the main use in China is in screening and diagnosis.

Several machine learning-powered diagnosis models developed by research teams in the AI lab at Zhejiang University have been rapidly catching up with overseas tech giants like Google. For instance, the specificity and sensitivity metrics for detecting diabetic retinopathy have reached 99 percent and 95 percent, respectively, which has surpassed Google AI diagnosis, according to the document.

Industrial standard needed

Despite the rapid growth of smart medical services, the Chinese authorities have not yet come up with an industrial standard for the sector, which may raise concerns over administrative supervision in the near future, experts noted. "If two research teams both claim they have reached a very high accuracy rate in diagnosing certain diseases, how to distinguish one from another remains uncertain if there is not a unified industrial standard," Wu said.

Although the National Health and Family Planning Commission handed out a draft for feedback on Internet clinical services and management earlier this year, there have been no more updates on it, said an industry insider, who preferred not to be named.

Compared to China, the U.S., which is the leader in the AI sector, holds a more cautious attitude as its regulators oversee AI application, he said.

http://www.ecns.cn/business/2017/11-17/281319.shtml
 
:coffee::enjoy::china:

新一代人工智能发展规划推进办公室成立 建设四大国家级开放创新平台

2017-11-17 15:49:45

关键字:中国工程院

如果评选近年的热门词汇,“人工智能”一定入围前三。作为一项引领未来的战略性技术,我国在这个领域取得了重要进展。我们的专利和论文已经局域在国际上居于前列,在语音识别、机器视觉、机器翻译领域全球领先,人工智能创新创业也非常活跃。

但是,我们有明显的短板,比如,在研发上,基础理论、核心算法、关键设备、高端芯片、重大产品和系统方面的原始创新成果还比较少;在人才储备上,无论规模还是质量远远满足不了需求,特别是高端领军人才比较缺乏;在产业生态上,我国的科研机构和企业还没有形成具有国际影响力的生态圈和产业链。

中国的人工智能下一步怎么走?

11月15日,中国科技部在京召开新一代人工智能发展规划暨重大科技项目启动会

出席会议的领导不可谓不高:

科技部部长万钢,

科技部党组书记、副部长王志刚,

中国工程院院长周济,

教育部副部长杜占元,

工业和信息化部副部长罗文,

交通运输部党组成员李建波,

卫生计生委副主任曾益新,

军委装备发展部副部长王力,

科技部副部长李萌,

部分战略咨询委员会专家,

此外,地方科技部门、产业技术创新战略联盟的代表,以及人工智能研发应用方面领先的部分企业、高校、科研院所代表,科技部有关司局和事业单位负责同志也参加了会议。

20171117153741108.jpg


科技部15日召开新一代人工智能发展规划暨重大科技项目启动会,宣布成立新一代人工智能发展规划推进办公室,并公布首批国家新一代人工智能开放创新平台名单。

成立一个推进组织机构

新一代人工智能发展规划推进办公室(在国家科技体制改革和创新体系建设领导小组领导下,在国家科技计划管理部级联席会议框架内)

职责:负责推进新一代人工智能发展规划和重大科技项目的组织实施

参与部门15个:

科技部、发展改革委、财政部、教育部、工业和信息化部、交通部、农业部、卫生计生委、

中科院、工程院、自然科学基金会、

中央军民融合发展委员会办公室、军委装备发展部、军委科技委、

中国科协

成立一个顾问机构

新一代人工智能战略咨询委员会

职责:为规划和重大科技项目实施,以及国家人工智能发展的相关重大部署提供咨询。

组长:潘云鹤院士(中国工程院院士、原常务副院长,浙江大学原校长)

成员:

陈纯院士、李未院士、高文院士、郑南宁院士、吴澄院士、李伯虎院士、吕跃广院士、梅宏院士、曹雪涛院士、王天然院士、吕建院士、吴志强院士、黄如院士、刘明院士、徐宗本院士、吴曼青院士、徐波研究员、李斌研究员、赵春江研究员、刘忠教授、薛澜教授,

以及来自企业的闵万里先生(阿里云人工智能首席科学家)、王海峰先生(百度副总裁及AI技术平台体系总负责人)、姚星先生(腾讯副总裁)、胡郁先生(科大讯飞执行总裁)、余凯先生(前百度研究院副院长,现为地平线创始人)共27名专家。

三大原则

政府统筹重点突破、市场主导产业链结合、军民融合开放共享

“三步走”目标

项目实施到2030年,将历经十三五、十四五、十五五三个五年计划。

2020年,人工智能总体技术和应用要与世界先进水平同步,基础理论及核心技术取得重要进展,初步建立人工智能产业链、技术标准和法律法规体系,从而支撑我国人工智能产业竞争力进入国际第一方阵;

到2025 年,人工智能基础理论实现重大突破,技术与应用部分达到世界领先水平,在重点应用领域初步形成我国自主的新一代人工智能应用技术体系,建立较为完整的法律法规伦理规范和政策体系;

到 2030 年,人工智能理论、技术及应用总体达到世界领先水平,建立系统的新一代人工智能理论与技术体系,占据人工智能技术制高点,成为世界主要人工智能创新中心,为跻身创新国家前列和基本实现社会主义现代化奠定重要基础

五大主力方向

大数据智能、跨媒体智能、混合增强智能、群体智能、自主智能系统

四个层面

基础理论、支撑体系、关键技术、创新应用

国家级四大开放创新平台

依托百度公司建设自动驾驶国家新一代人工智能开放创新平台,

依托阿里云公司建设城市大脑国家新一代人工智能开放创新平台,

依托腾讯公司建设医疗影像国家新一代人工智能开放创新平台,

依托科大讯飞公司建设智能语音国家新一代人工智能开放创新平台。

重大项目支撑单位

人工智能产业技术创新战略联盟(2017年7月23日成立),负责新一代人工智能重大科技项目具体项目管理

“一体两翼”工作部署

“一体”是指人工智能开源开放平台。

人工智能需要一个开放透明的基础技术平台,而打造这样的公益平台,需要新一代人工智能重大科技项目引领,也需要汇聚全国以及全球的人力资源和社会力量,并向全球各种人工智能应用开放。

“两翼”

左翼为以专家为主体的多个工作组,包括标准工作组、知识产权工作组、投融资工作组等。标准工作组以 AVS 十五年标准制定和知识产权管理经验为基础,已经开始制定《神经网络表示与压缩》、《深度学习特征编码》、《人脸识别评测》等标准的制定工作。

右翼为以企业为主体的应用推进组,目的是深化人工智能应用,促进产业发展,例如智能物流、智能医疗、智能政府、智能教育等。

这次会议的召开标志着新一代人工智能发展规划和重大科技项目进入全面启动实施阶段。

20171117153801949.png


央视与中科院共同主办的大型科学挑战类节目《机智过人》

“打造我国人工智能先发优势。”科技部部长万钢在会议上强调,要突出基础前沿和高端引领,牢牢把握创新源头和方向,实施好重大科技项目,形成新一代人工智能技术体系的前瞻布局。要大规模推进人工智能创新应用,促进人工智能与实体经济深度融合,引领带动智能经济和智能社会发展。

据观察者网查询,2017年7月,国务院印发《新一代人工智能发展规划》,提出

构建开放协同的人工智能科技创新体系、

培育高端高效的智能经济、

建设安全便捷的智能社会、

加强人工智能领域军民融合、

构建泛在安全高效的智能化基础设施体系,

前瞻布局新一代人工智能重大科技项目等六项重大任务。

其中新一代人工智能重大科技项目,聚焦基础理论和关键共性技术的前瞻布局,包括研究大数据智能、跨媒体感知计算、混合增强智能、群体智能、自主协同控制与决策等理论,研究知识计算引擎与知识服务技术、跨媒体分析推理技术、群体智能关键技术、混合增强智能新架构与新技术、自主无人控制技术等,开源共享人工智能基础理论和共性技术。持续开展人工智能发展的预测和研判,加强人工智能对经济社会综合影响及对策研究。

2017年10月,习近平在十九大报告中要求“加快建设制造强国,加快发展先进制造业,推动互联网、大数据、人工智能和实体经济深度融合,在中高端消费、创新引领、绿色低碳、共享经济、现代供应链、人力资本服务等领域培育新增长点、形成新动能。”

据悉,新一代人工智能重大科技项目实施方案已经印发,年底前,相关项目指南将编制完成。

可以预见,一场开放创新的人工智能盛宴正在开启!

观察者网综合中国政府网、新华社、科学网、雷锋网等报道

http://www.guancha.cn/Industry/2017_11_17_435296_2.shtml
 

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