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China's Race for Artificial Intelligence (AI) Technology

AI chip unicorn Cambricon is industry's most valuable startup
Zhang Jin China Plus Published: 2018-06-20 20:03:54

China's first artificial intelligence (AI) chip unicorn Cambricon is now valued at 2.5 billion U.S. dollars after its B-round financing, the highest valuation among global smart chip startups, reports thepaper.cn.

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Cambricon Technology CEO Chen Tianshi introduces the cloud AI chip MLU100 in Shanghai on May 3, 2018. [File photo: Xinhua]

The company was founded in 2016 by two brothers, Chen Yunji and Chen Tianshi, who are researchers at the Chinese Academy of Sciences.

Cambricon released China's first AI chip, Cambricon-1A, in 2016. The chip, designed for devices such as smartphones, wearables and drones, is said to be the world's first commercialized neural network processor chip.

The startup raised 100 million U.S. dollars in its A-round funding in August 2017, making it the first unicorn in the industry.

Cambricon unveiled China's first AI chip for cloud computing last month. The chip, called MLU100, has accurate and fast big data processing capacity, especially when it comes to image and voice searches, according to Xinhua News Agency.
 
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Ant Financial opens AI services to asset management firms
By Wang Yanfei | chinadaily.com.cn | Updated: 2018-06-20 14:04

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A mascot of Ant Financial is seen at its office in Hangzhou, East China's Zhejiang province, Sept 21, 2016. [Photo/Agencies]

China's e-commerce giant Alibaba's affiliate Ant Financial on Wednesday said the company will share a full suite of AI capabilities with asset management companies in China to support their digital transformation.

The announcement comes after Caifuhao, an AI-powered corporate account on the Ant Fortune platform, has brought tangible benefits to 27 fund management companies since the account went into operation last year.

These companies have been able to increase their operational efficiency by 70 percent while reducing their overall costs by 50 percent, according to the company.

"By combining Ant Financial' s AI technologies with the capabilities of asset management companies in investor education and fund management, together we are making customized wealth management services more accessible for ordinary users," said Eric Jing, CEO of Ant Financial.

More than 100 asset management companies have signed up to join the Ant Fortune platform since its inception in 2015, representing over 90 percent of all fund management companies in China.

This has resulted in more than 4,000 wealth management products being made available to tens of millions of individual Ant Fortune users.

Ant Financial has accelerated its pace of opening up its technological capabilities in recent months to financial institutions.

Banks including Huaxia Bank, China Everbright Bank, Shanghai Pudong Development Bank, China CITIC Bank, and Bank of Tianjin have signed strategic cooperation agreements with Ant Financial to support the banks' digital transformation.
 
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Shanghai-based startup introduces heart and lung auscultation platform
Vega Chiu, DIGITIMES, Taipei
Wednesday 20 June 2018

When a doctor puts a stethoscope on a patient's chest, he or she usually asks the patient to breathe in deeply and breathe out slowly. This is quite common when a patient has a cold or serious cough: the doctor listens to the patient's heart and lungs to check for respiratory infection.

Going to the doctor for a cold does not seem much of a hassle in Taiwan where the size and density of population is enough to support widespread neighborhood clinics and medical institutions. Healthcare is generally readily available to people in Taiwan. However, it is not the same for people living in countries with vast territories or people having difficulty making trips to see a doctor.

In view of this, Shanghai Tuoxiao Intelligent Technology has developed an intelligent heart and lung auscultation system and service that combines a digital stethoscope, AI-based algorithm and big data analytics platform for heart and lung sounds.

According to Tuoxiao CFO Hsueh Yang, the system automatically analyzes whether there is anything abnormal with the user's heart or lung sounds using the AI-based algorithm to help a doctor make diagnosis. Its cloud-based platform not only analyzes and stores biophysical data but also sends the data to hospitals. Furthermore, its digital stethoscope also records the user's heart and lung sounds, which can be played back to healthcare professionals when the user later makes a hospital visit.

Yang points out that the system makes remote auscultation and remote diagnosis a reality. It provides a home care tool to warn patients of potential heart or lung problems and to monitor health conditions during recuperation. In other words, Tuoxiao's intelligent heart and lung auscultation system can integrate with hierarchical medical services and remote health centers to accelerate the availability of remote healthcare.

According to the company, its intelligent heart and lung auscultation system has accumulated more than 20,000 heart and lung sound recordings. Tuoxiao is also working with Shanghai Children's Hospital and Affiliated Hospital of Liaoning College of Traditional Chinese Medicine and has begun trial operation at Wuhu City Community Hospital of Anhui Province.

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Hsueh Yang, CFO, Shanghai Tuoxiao Intelligent Technology
Photo: Vega Chiu, Digitimes, June 2018



https://www.digitimes.com/news/a20180614PD209.html
 
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not so long is it but any way good for china technology advancements
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Tencent releases first AI-aided medical platform
Xinhua Finance in www.cfbond.com
2018-06-24 20:50

The Chinese tech giant, Tencent Holdings Ltd. released its first artificial intelligence-aided medical diagnosis and treatment open platform on June 21 to support the hospital information system (HIS) and achieve an intelligent upgrade of online medical services.

Tencent also launched the first medical AI engine for Tencent Miying. Chen Guangyu, the vice president of Tencent hoped that Tencent Miying would be a toolbox for hospitals and medical information technology providers and help the medical industry to create a “super brain” for the new generation of intelligent medical services.

As Tencent’s first product that applies AI technology to the medical field, Tencent Miying contains two core functions: AI medical imaging analysis, as well as AI-aided diagnosis and treatment, which also cooperates with over 100 top domestic ranking hospitals.

The medical AI engine of Tencent Miying can improve its ability for medical diagnosis through simulating the doctors’ study process and help doctors to diagnose and predict more than 700 diseases covering all medical subjects.

Through an open interface, medical information providers can integrate Tencent Miying with hospital information systems (HIS) to help the HIS gain the ability of AI-aided diagnoses and treatments, as well as achieve the sharing and interconnections of internal data.

When the AI-aided diagnoses and treatments are applied to the Clinical Decision Support System (CDSS), it will enhance doctors’ diagnoses accuracy and efficiency for common diseases, and provide other clinical decision support, including reference to diagnosis and treatment plans, intention-to-treat analyses, an auxiliary knowledge base and well structured electronic medical records.

Due to Tencent Miying, hospitals and medical information providers will realize an intelligent upgrade of their mobile medical services, increase the accuracy and efficiency of the information collected before doctor visits, as well as help doctors and patients communicate outside of hospitals.

Tencent signed AI cooperation agreements with several medical information providers, such as the Zoe Software Corporation, the Kingdee International Software Group, and medical institutions, including the First Affiliated Hospital of Xiamen University, the Shandong Provincial Hospital, and the University of Hong Kong-Shenzhen Hospital.
 
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iFlytek, MIT sign AI alliance

(Global Times) 08:10, June 25, 2018

China's leading intelligent voice recognition technology company iFlytek has signed a cooperation agreement with the Massachusetts Institute of Technology's (MIT) Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL), the Xinhua News Agency reported on Saturday.

CSAIL is one of the most successful laboratories doing interdisciplinary research in MIT, and has recorded many achievements in the field of artificial intelligence (AI), while iFlytek has led the development of speech recognition software in China for 19 years.
 
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China to hold major intelligence technology expo in August
AI


By Gao Yun
1462km to Beijing
2018-06-26


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The first SmartChina Expo will be held in southwest China's Chongqing Municipality in August, an important event to “accelerate the development of China’s artificial intelligence (AI) industry,” said Zhou Changkui from Ministry of Science and Technology (MOST) at the press conference held by the State Council Information Office (SCIO) on Tuesday.

The expo, set for August 23 - 25, is jointly organized by MOST, Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT), Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS), Chinese Academy of Engineering (CAE), China Association for Science and Technology (CAST) and Chongqing Municipal People's Government.

“AI is the frontier and hotspot in the new round of scientific and technological revolution and industrial transformation,” said Zhou. The expo is expected to be built into an integrated platform to release AI achievements, to cluster industries and to help investment cooperation, promoting resource sharing and efficient applications in the industry.

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Zhou Changkui from Ministry of Science and Technology. /SCIO Photo

The expo will “accelerate in-depth integration of Internet, big data, AI and the real economy and play a significant role in promoting a high-quality development of the economy,” said Wang Xinzhe, chief economist of MIIT.

Various events can be anticipated in this expo, according to Tang Liangzhi, mayor of Chongqing Municipality.

Under a theme of energizing economy and brightening life, the expo will center on four parts, namely exhibitions, competitions forums and thematic activities. Exhibitions on enterprises, innovation, and special subjects will be seen in the 150,000-square-meter exhibition area. Five competitions involving autonomous driving, futuristic technologies, multiple forums concerning semiconductor, AI, and digital economy as well as mayor roundtable activity can be expected.

Representatives from leading enterprises, international organizations in related industries and renowned experts have been invited, Tang added.

China’s progress in AI industry

China issued the Next Generation AI Development Plan last July, and it has made significant achievements after years’ efforts.

“China now ranks the world’s second in the amount of published international scientific papers and invention patents authorization,” said Zhou. “Great breakthroughs have also been realized in key technologies in some areas, with the technologies of voice recognition and visual identification leading the world.”

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China leads the world in the technology of voice recognition. /VCG Photo

Chinese information processing, smart monitoring, identification of biological features, industrial and service robot, driverless driving, to name a few, have entered the phase of pragmatic application.

Factors like the rapidly-developed technical capabilities, massive data resources, huge demand and open market environment have contributed to the unique advantages of China’s AI development, Zhou added.

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Wang Xinzhe, chief economist of Ministry of Industry and Information Technology. /SCIO Photo

Next, China will make efforts to make breakthroughs in core technologies, enhance the integrative development between the AI and other industries, strengthen the coordination between ministries and provinces and improve the policy system to build a sound environment for the industry, according to Wang.

China to hold major intelligence technology expo in August
AI


By Gao Yun
1462km to Beijing
2018-06-26


51b863f053834bc99cafa135feb2b0a9.jpg



The first SmartChina Expo will be held in southwest China's Chongqing Municipality in August, an important event to “accelerate the development of China’s artificial intelligence (AI) industry,” said Zhou Changkui from Ministry of Science and Technology (MOST) at the press conference held by the State Council Information Office (SCIO) on Tuesday.

The expo, set for August 23 - 25, is jointly organized by MOST, Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT), Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS), Chinese Academy of Engineering (CAE), China Association for Science and Technology (CAST) and Chongqing Municipal People's Government.

“AI is the frontier and hotspot in the new round of scientific and technological revolution and industrial transformation,” said Zhou. The expo is expected to be built into an integrated platform to release AI achievements, to cluster industries and to help investment cooperation, promoting resource sharing and efficient applications in the industry.

3dc693ac9095497998db1a2d576c216d.jpg

Zhou Changkui from Ministry of Science and Technology. /SCIO Photo

The expo will “accelerate in-depth integration of Internet, big data, AI and the real economy and play a significant role in promoting a high-quality development of the economy,” said Wang Xinzhe, chief economist of MIIT.

Various events can be anticipated in this expo, according to Tang Liangzhi, mayor of Chongqing Municipality.

Under a theme of energizing economy and brightening life, the expo will center on four parts, namely exhibitions, competitions forums and thematic activities. Exhibitions on enterprises, innovation, and special subjects will be seen in the 150,000-square-meter exhibition area. Five competitions involving autonomous driving, futuristic technologies, multiple forums concerning semiconductor, AI, and digital economy as well as mayor roundtable activity can be expected.

Representatives from leading enterprises, international organizations in related industries and renowned experts have been invited, Tang added.

China’s progress in AI industry

China issued the Next Generation AI Development Plan last July, and it has made significant achievements after years’ efforts.

“China now ranks the world’s second in the amount of published international scientific papers and invention patents authorization,” said Zhou. “Great breakthroughs have also been realized in key technologies in some areas, with the technologies of voice recognition and visual identification leading the world.”

27c697053ab84a02b12305689914450c.jpg

China leads the world in the technology of voice recognition. /VCG Photo

Chinese information processing, smart monitoring, identification of biological features, industrial and service robot, driverless driving, to name a few, have entered the phase of pragmatic application.

Factors like the rapidly-developed technical capabilities, massive data resources, huge demand and open market environment have contributed to the unique advantages of China’s AI development, Zhou added.

4872a9e3362c49c486d0d3fd94f661a3.jpg

Wang Xinzhe, chief economist of Ministry of Industry and Information Technology. /SCIO Photo

Next, China will make efforts to make breakthroughs in core technologies, enhance the integrative development between the AI and other industries, strengthen the coordination between ministries and provinces and improve the policy system to build a sound environment for the industry, according to Wang.
 
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AI gives doctors a hand
By Zhu Lixin | China Daily | Updated: 2018-06-26 09:49
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An automated system dispenses medicine for patients at Affiliated Fuyang Hospital of Anhui Medical University, in Fuyang, Anhui province. [Photo/Xinhua]

Technology tags along on ward rounds at China's first intelligent hospital, as Zhu Lixin reports.

Anhui Provincial Hospital became China's first intelligent hospital in August, using artificial intelligence-enabled systems to help doctors with medical diagnoses and treatment.

Four months later, the hospital, in Hefei, Anhui's provincial capital, was renamed the First Affiliated Hospital of University of Science and Technology of China.

Yan Guang, the hospital's deputy head and the man in charge of its intelligent transformation, said that when it launched an AI-enabled smartphone application in 2016, doctors and nurses were keen to use it.

Developed by iFlytek, an AI company based in Hefei, the system uses speech-recognition technology to type up medical records and image-recognition technology to help doctors read medical images.

"The users of the app, which is a tailored edition for the hospital, soon reached a satisfying number," Yan said. "Then we found there were also nurses among the users, while the system was designed to serve doctors.

"Nice numbers are definitely not all we want. It is the doctors using the app who can help the system improve."

He said he subsequently had to limit use of the app among nurses.

Doctors said the AI-enabled systems have made their work more effective and efficient, although there are still some problems to overcome.

Qi Yinbao said that in his first four years as a neurosurgeon at the hospital, beginning in 2013, he had to spend much of his time writing up patients' medical records every day.

"I usually wrote them between surgeries, and very often would stay in the office after working hours to finish them," he said. "Sometimes I found I forgot some important information and needed to go through all the print records of examination results to refresh my memory."

With the app developed by iFlytek, Qi and the hospital's more than 1,300 doctors now have speech-recognition technology to help them record their diagnoses.

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A patient uses a robot to find his way around the USTC hospital in Hefei, Anhui province.

Special dictionary

To open the app, Qi can log in with either a fingerprint or a combination of face and voice recognition. He then just speaks into his smartphone and the app types up the information precisely.

Because doctors use many professional medical terms, iFlytek engineers said they built a special dictionary to make speech recognition more precise.

"The system also features deep learning technology, which means the more doctors use the system, the more precise the results will be," said Lu Xiaoliang, deputy general manager of iFlytek's intelligent healthcare business.

Some senior medical specialists found typing up records on a computer tedious, so the hospital previously had to arrange an assistant for each of them.

"With AI technology, the senior experts can now also work alone well, saving a lot of human resources for the hospital," Yan said.

Qi said the speech-recognition technology could help dentists even more, as they were not able to spare a hand to write up records when working on patients' teeth.

"They just need to keep the speech-recognition function working," Qi said.

The function also works on a computer with a microphone, but it keeps typing as Qi keeps speaking, even though some of the things he says have nothing to do with his diagnosis, and he needs to delete them when he ends the recording.

That could prevent a dentist from chatting with a patient to relieve their anxiety, because there would be too much information to delete afterward.

The results of certain examinations of patients are automatically entered into the app, allowing Qi to check them anytime, anywhere.

"In the past, before making ward rounds to the patients' rooms, we were first offered many print records and then asked the patients about their health conditions and took notes before returning to the office to type on computer-based systems", Qi said.

But part of the preparatory work can now be done ahead of time, even when a doctor is on a bus or subway train.

Yan said a more important feature of the system is that it can help doctors read medical images to speed up diagnosis and prevent misdiagnosis.

Take CT scans for example. A doctor could spend minutes reading a CT case, which usually consists of many - sometimes hundreds - of images, before making an initial diagnosis, but Lu said it takes less than a second for the AI system to do the same thing.

"Best of all, the system won't get tired," he said.

The AI-enabled system has helped interpret thousands of CT images, Lu said, and the accuracy for detection of lung nodules, one of the indicators of potential lung cancer, has reached 99.4 percent.

To build the intelligent hospital, Yan said several AI-enabled systems have been launched since 2016 in cooperation with iFlytek and other firms, including internet giants Alibaba and Tencent.

"None of the systems can work perfectly, but in the long run they will improve over time," he said. "The medical sector will inevitably become more intelligent, and we cannot miss the chance to lead the trend."

The hospital has not paid iFlytek a penny since they began cooperating in 2016.

"They don't need to," said Chen Liang, an iFlytek employee who leads a team of more than 10 engineers working in the hospital. "It will be by learning from the hospital what they really need that we can develop better systems."

Yan is prudent when discussing the potential of AI-enabled systems, but they are already helping to guide patients around the hospital and allowing it to link up with hospitals around the province.

Another example is work on an intelligent emergency medical system.

"Once you call the emergency center for first aid, your health information, based on all of your hospital records, will be provided to the first-aid personnel in the ambulance and doctors at the hospital," said Yan, who was in charge of the hospital's emergency medical center from 2004 to 2007.

All the necessary advice on tailored first-aid solutions will be given to the medical personnel through the AI technology and they will see the advice via a smartphone app, he said.

The hospital has invested millions of yuan in the project, just dealing with its own medical records, and Yan said expanding the practice will require more effort.

The provincial authorities have launched a plan to build personal healthcare profiles, which can be shared between hospitals, for every citizen, and the project is progressing well, he said.

Intelligent healthcare is becoming a trend in hospitals. Hefei has also established a municipal-level intelligent hospital and the provincial authorities plan to set up six more at the provincial level and at least 15 at the municipal level this year.

First standard

Gao Junwen, deputy head of the Anhui Provincial Health Commission, said there must be some standards hospitals can refer to.

To build an intelligent hospital, the USTC hospital released its own 47 pages of standards, which won recognition from the provincial authorities. "It is the country's first official standard for intelligent hospitals, and the national standard is expected to be drawn up using this one as an important reference," Gao said.

Yan said there should be standards for different levels of intelligent hospital. "A county level intelligent hospital can by no means be built with a standard for a provincial-level one," he said.

A recent article in the journal Chinese Digital Medicine, which is published by the National Health Commission, said there are still some technical difficulties to overcome in applying speech-recognition technology in diagnosis and treatment.

Written by a team of doctors from the General Hospital of the Guangzhou Command of the People's Liberation Army, the article said background noise and doctors' accents could affect the accuracy of the recognition process.

Speaking about a patient's health conditions in an office shared by several doctors also failed to protect the patient's privacy, it said, adding that solving the problem requires more investment to rearrange doctors' offices by, for example, giving them more private space.

As the intelligent healthcare business heats up, Lu said competition between companies is getting fiercer.

"Some of the firms act as if they can change the world overnight, while we believe making healthcare intelligent still needs great efforts to improve technology," Lu said.

"In the past, say about two years ago, some medical experts were too cautious about the business while some others' opinions on it were too negative.

"Nowadays, their understanding of the business is getting more rational - the current technologies are not perfect but they can be improved."

He said the business is very reliant on government support, because the authorities are always very cautious about the healthcare sector.
 
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China’s pilot program to use AI to detect cancer
By Ge Yunfei
2018-06-28 14:24 GMT+8

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In China, algorithms crunching mountains of data have already shown their ability to improve people’s lives. Artificial intelligence (AI) is reporting breakthroughs in detecting cancer.

In the country, more than 2.7 million people died of cancer every year. That means cancer kills more than five Chinese people every minute.

Dr. Xu Guoliang, the chief for Department of Endoscopy and Laser at Sun Yat-sen University Cancer Treatment Center, has been trying to detect cancer in its earliest stages, which can improve a patient’s chances of survival.

Xu is an endoscopy specialist working at one of the largest cancer treatment centers in southern China. He searches for tumors inside body cavities and hollow organs like the stomach. The World Health Organization (WHO) says stomach cancer is a leading cause of death in China, but there aren’t enough Chinese doctors like Xu.

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Dr. Xu Guoliang from Sun Yat-sen University Cancer Treatment Center /CGTN Photo

Xu told CGTN that five years ago, there were only about 29,000 qualified endoscopy doctors in China. But according to their estimates, there are 120 million patients that need an endoscopy each year. That means China has to increase the number of doctors 50 times to meet that demand. Clearly “that’s almost impossible,” Xu added.

So, Xu turned to AI for help. His hospital has been working with Internet giant Tencent to develop an AI clinical diagnostic system called Miying.

According to Xu, each endoscopy examination will produce 48 images that’ll be simultaneously sent to Tencent’s database. And the AI system will give feedback in four seconds. Based on a huge pool of data, it’ll suggest which position could be the cancer lesion.

Xu said AI’s accuracy in diagnosing some types of cancer early is as high as 90 percent, and it is still improving.

Patients in China’s first-tier cities may still prefer human doctors at the best hospitals, but for the one billion or so people living in less-developed areas with limited medical resources, AI promises huge benefits.

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AI promises huge benefits for patients living in less-developed areas with limited medical resources. /VCG Photo

“AI is able to learn from ‘big data.’ That’s what humans can’t do. We hope the system can reach remote areas and grassroots hospitals in China, where patients can get a diagnosis as accurate as the ones in first-class hospitals in big cities,” said Zhou Xuan, a senior product director of the Miying AI project of Tencent.

The Chinese government is part of a global trend. Last November, it announced plans to build a national platform for AI diagnostic imaging – a commitment to AI as a pillar in the future of Chinese medicine.

The UK government says in the next 15 years, AI could prevent more than 20,000 cancer deaths a year. And, scanning cell images only, US researchers have shown AI can distinguish types of cancer, in most cases with nearly 100 percent accuracy.
 
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Siasun hybrid autonomous collaborative robot
  • 7-axis robot arm
  • 0.02mm precision movement
  • collision detection (safe for human interaction)
  • autonomous obstacle avoidance

Commercial autonomous vacuum robot from Siasun.

Automated logistics
 
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Siasun hybrid autonomous collaborative robot
  • 7-axis robot arm
  • 0.02mm precision movement
  • collision detection (safe for human interaction)
  • autonomous obstacle avoidance

Commercial autonomous vacuum robot from Siasun.

Automated logistics

This is the very reason that the US wages a (losing) economic war against China.

The road will be bumpy till 2025. But, the road will not be blocked.
 
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China Focus: AI beats human doctors in neuroimaging recognition contest
Source: Xinhua| 2018-06-30 22:48:09|Editor: Yamei


BEIJING, June 30 (Xinhua) -- An artificial intelligence (AI) system scored 2:0 against elite human physicians Saturday in two rounds of competitions in diagnosing brain tumors and predicting hematoma expansion in Beijing.

The BioMind AI system, developed by the Artificial Intelligence Research Centre for Neurological Disorders at the Beijing Tiantan Hospital and a research team from the Capital Medical University, made correct diagnoses in 87 percent of 225 cases in about 15 minutes, while a team of 15 senior doctors only achieved 66-percent accuracy.

The AI also gave correct predictions in 83 percent of brain hematoma expansion cases, outperforming the 63-percent accuracy among a group of physicians from renowned hospitals across the country.

The outcomes for human physicians were quite normal and even better than the average accuracy in ordinary hospitals, said Gao Peiyi, head of the radiology department at Tiantan Hospital, a leading institution on neurology and neurosurgery.

To train the AI, developers fed it tens of thousands of images of nervous system-related diseases that the Tiantan Hospital has archived over the past 10 years, making it capable of diagnosing common neurological diseases such as meningioma and glioma with an accuracy rate of over 90 percent, comparable to that of a senior doctor.

All the cases were real and contributed by the hospital, but never used as training material for the AI, according to the organizer.

Wang Yongjun, executive vice president of the Tiantan Hospital, said that he personally did not care very much about who won, because the contest was never intended to pit humans against technology but to help doctors learn and improve through interactions with technology.

"I hope through this competition, doctors can experience the power of artificial intelligence. This is especially so for some doctors who are skeptical about artificial intelligence. I hope they can further understand AI and eliminate their fears toward it," said Wang.

Dr. Lin Yi who participated and lost in the second round, said that she welcomes AI, as it is not a threat but a "friend."

AI will not only reduce the workload but also push doctors to keep learning and improve their skills, said Lin.

Bian Xiuwu, an academician with the Chinese Academy of Science and a member of the competition's jury, said there has never been an absolute standard correct answer in diagnosing developing diseases, and the AI would only serve as an assistant to doctors in giving preliminary results.

Dr. Paul Parizel, former president of the European Society of Radiology and another member of the jury, also agreed that AI will not replace doctors, but will instead function similar to how GPS does for drivers.

Dr. Gauden Galea, representative of the World Health Organization in China, said AI is an exciting tool for healthcare but still in the primitive stages.

Based on the size of its population and the huge volume of accessible digital medical data, China has a unique advantage in developing medical AI, according to Galea.

China has introduced a series of plans in developing AI applications in recent years.

In 2017, the State Council issued a development plan on the new generation of Artificial Intelligence and the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology also issued the "Three-Year Action Plan for Promoting the Development of a New Generation of Artificial Intelligence (2018-2020)."

The Action Plan proposed developing medical image-assisted diagnostic systems to support medicine in various fields.


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Canada announces counter-tariffs, aid to manufacturing industries
CGTN
2018-06-30


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With a 20 percent higher accuracy rate, an artificial intelligence (AI) machine trumped a group of human doctors in the world’s first competition between physicians and AI in neuroimaging on Saturday.

Named BioMind, the AI can assist doctors in checking CT and MRI images, which is the first of its kind. It is jointly developed by several organizations and institutions, including the China National Clinical Research Center for Neurological Diseases.

BioMind has shown strong advantages when practicing for the competition by diagnosing more than 300 cases within 30 minutes while human doctors spend more than 10 hours to complete the same task, said The Beijing News.

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The "AI doctor" BioMind placed on the stage during the competition. /The Beijing News Photo

There were 25 human doctors participating in the “human vs. AI” competition, which was divided into two sections. In the first part of the game, a group of 15 doctors and BioMind were required to interpret 225 CT and MRI images of intracranial tumors within 30 minutes.

With an accuracy rate of 87 percent, the AI defeated the human team which finished with an accuracy rate of 66 percent.

During the second half of the game which also had a time limit of 30 minutes, the human team made of 10 doctors and BioMind were assigned 30 questions regarding the interpretation of CT and MRI images of cerebrovascular diseases.

The AI once again won the game with an accuracy rate of 83 percent comparing to 63 percent of the human doctors.

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Doctors diagnose CT and MRI images during the competition. /The Beijing News Photo

It is worth mentioning that the AI took about only 15 minutes to complete its task in each section while the doctors had to use up every second to solve the questions.

Gao Peiyi, the director of Imaging Center of Neuroscience of Beijing Tiantan Hospital, said that competition ended in the way they expected.

“Currently the workload is very heavy for our doctors,” said Gao. “We hope in the future, with the help of AI, doctors could have more time to do research and take care of patients.”

The AI machine BioMind is under examination and approval of the China Food and Drug Administration and is expected to be put into clinical application next year.

(Top image via The Beijing News)

https://news.cgtn.com/news/3d3d514f344d444e78457a6333566d54/share_p.html
 
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China Focus: Tech giants tap into AI healthcare market
Source: Xinhua| 2018-06-19 15:52:15|Editor: Yamei

By Ng Tze Yan, Cheng Lu and Wang Feng

SHENZHEN, June 19 (Xinhua) -- Before 2017, gastroenterologist Cheng Chunsheng had to inspect over 1,000 gastroscopy pictures to search for possible esophageal cancer symptoms, a cancer which appears in the food pipe.

However, this painstaking process is no longer needed since the People's Hospital of Nanshan District in Shenzhen where Cheng works introduced "Tencent AIMIS", an AI medical imaging software released in August last year.

"The AI system screens through each report and notifies the doctor if further inspection is needed," said Cheng. The system has significantly boosted his efficiency.

A doctor's experience is the most important tool when diagnosing esophageal cancer at an early stage. Cheng said the system, developed by Tencent, would assist younger doctors in making more precise diagnoses.

"It is often difficult for new doctors to judge whether an erosion or an ulcer is related to cancer. The AI application would recommend younger doctors to discuss the case with an expert instead," he added.

Chen Guangyu, Tencent's vice president, said the program has scanned hundreds of thousands of gastroscopy images and is over 90 percent accurate in diagnosing preliminary esophageal cancer.

"By accumulating mass data, the analysis is expected to become even more reliable," Chen added.

Tencent AIMIS is now used in more than 100 hospitals across China. The company has also partnered with over 10 hospitals to build AI medical laboratories.

Chen said that through the AI laboratories, Tencent AIMIS can be used to screen more diseases such as lung nodules, diabetic retinopathy, cervical cancer and breast cancer.

Apart from Tencent, other internet corporations are also exploring the AI healthcare market.

In 2016, Baidu launched Melody the Medical Assistant, an AI-powered chatbot designed to converse with patients and collect data on their conditions to save physicians time.

ET medical brain, an AI healthcare system produced by Alibaba, can aid doctors in medical imaging, drug development and health management.

China's State Council issued a guideline in April to promote health services using internet technologies.

The guidelines on "Internet Plus Healthcare" say internet technologies should be used to offer medical and public health services, promote family doctor practices, improve drug supply and medical bill payments, and provide medical education.

According to a 2017 industry report released by VCBeat Research, more than 80 companies are working on AI for the Chinese health market by developing products such as medical imaging devices, AI to analyze patients' clinical history and chatbots.

Luo Xudong, head of People's Hospital of Nanshan District in Shenzhen, said the advancement of AI-assisted healthcare can help alleviate the problem of inadequate and imbalanced medical resource allocation in China.

According to China Statistical Yearbook, every 1,000 Chinese urban residents had access to 3.92 physicians in 2016, while every 1,000 rural residents had only 1.59.

"AI-powered medical products support remote medical consultation and training. Through an application, villagers in remote areas can also enjoy similar quality services as those urban residents," Luo said.

Chang Jia, who manages Tencent's "internet plus" healthcare center, said that a small error in the medical field could be a matter of life or death.

"The industry still positions AI as an assistant to the doctors. On one hand, medicine is a mix of humanities, ethics and science, and there are no easy answers; on the other hand, AI-based medical technologies remain in a fledging state and still need time to learn before they mature," Chang said.
 
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Baidu unveils Kunlun AI chip for edge and cloud computing
KHARI JOHNSON@KHARIJOHNSON JULY 3, 2018 7:30 PM

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Above: The Kunlun AI chip was debuted in at the Baidu Create AI developer conference in Beijing
Image Credit: Baidu


Baidu today unveiled a new chip for AI, joining the ranks of Google, Nvidia, Intel, and many other tech companies making processors especially for AI.

Kunlun is made to handle AI models both for edge computing on devices and in the cloud via data centers. The Kunlun 818-300 model will be used for training AI and the 818-100 for inference.

Baidu began working with field-programmable gate array (FPGA) chips especially designed for deep learning in 2011, the company said, and Kunlun is about 30 times faster than the first FPGA chip from Baidu, and is able to achieve 260 tera-operations per second (TOPS) and 512 GB/second memory bandwidth, a company spokesperson told VentureBeat in an email. No date has been set for the release of the chip.

FPGA chips are also at the center of Microsoft’s Project Brainwave for fast AI processing in the cloud.

“With the rapid emergence of AI applications, dramatically increasing requirements are being imposed on computational power. Traditional chips limit how much computing power is available and thus how far we can accelerate AI technologies,” the company said in a statement. “Baidu developed this chip, specifically designed for large-scale AI workloads, as an answer to this demand.”

The announcement was made at the second annual AI developer conference Baidu Create in Beijing.

Also announced today: Baidu’s Apollo program will help power self-driving buses named Apolong.

Apolong was developed with Chinese bus maker King Long and utilizes Baidu’s Apollo autonomous driving platform. The buses for commercial passengers will operate in Chinese cities like Beijing, Shenzhen, Pingtan and Wuhan and Tokyo in Japan. Roughly 100 Apolong buses have been made already and are scheduled to hit roads in early 2019.

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Above: Apolong self-driving bus
Image Credit: Baidu

Baidu also announced an upgrade to its suite of AI services today and the release of Baidu Brain 3.0 With the release of Brain 3.0, the platform that can supply simple drag-and-drop training of AI models has 110 AI services ranging from computer vision to natural language processing to facial recognition software.

By comparison, at the last Baidu Create, the Brain platform offered 60 AI services, a spokesperson said.



Baidu unveils Kunlun AI chip for edge and cloud computing | venturebeat.com
 
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