What's new

China's Race for Artificial Intelligence (AI) Technology

China to develop intelligent stethoscope
Source: Xinhua| 2018-10-20 09:43:58|Editor: Yang Yi


BEIJING, Oct. 20 (Xinhua) -- A group of Chinese hospitals will jointly launch an intelligent heart and lung stethoscope project to make the diagnosis of heart and lung diseases more accurate and convenient.

An auscultation cloud system will provide intelligent auxiliary diagnosis, remote monitoring and illness tracking of heart, lung and vascular diseases, by integrating the technologies of the intelligent electronic stethoscope, AI, cloud computing and telemedicine, according to a Science and Technology Daily report.

The cloud system will keep the information of diagnosis and treatment accurate and in time, according to the newspaper. It aims to shorten consultation time at hospital and help grassroots medical units conduct remote diagnosis and treatment.

The project was joined by the Chinese PLA General Hospital in Beijing and Xiangya Hospital in Changsha.
 
23 Oct 2018 | 21:30 GMT
Baidu's AI Can Do Simultaneous Translation Between Any Two Languages
Baidu Research reveals a translation tool that keeps up by predicting the future

By Eliza Strickland

MzE1NjM4OA.jpeg

Photo-illustration: Shutterstock

Would-be travelers of the galaxy, rejoice: The Chinese tech giant Baidu has invented a translation system that brings us one step closer to a software Babel fish.

For those unfamiliar with the Douglas Adams masterworks of science fiction, let me explain. The Babel fish is a slithery fictional creature that takes up residence in the ear canal of humans, tapping into their neural systems to provide instant translation of any language they hear.

In the real world, until now, we’ve had to make do with human and software interpreters that do their best to keep up. But the new AI-powered tool from Baidu Research, called STACL, could speed things up considerably. It uses a sophisticated type of natural language processing that lags only a few words behind, and keeps up by predicting the future.

“What’s remarkable is that it predicts and anticipates the words a speaker is about to say a few seconds in the future,” says Liang Huang, principal scientist of Baidu’s Silicon Valley AI Lab. “That’s a technique that human interpreters use all the time—and it’s critical for real-world applications of interpretation technology.”


The STACL (Simultaneous Translation with Anticipation and Controllable Latency) tool is comparable to the human interpreters who sit in booths during UN meetings. These humans have a tough job. As a dignitary speaks, the interpreters must simultaneously listen, mentally translate, and speak in another language, usually lagging only a few words behind. It’s such a difficult task that UN interpreters usually work in teams and take shifts of only 10 to 30 minutes.

A task requiring that kind of parallel processing—listening, translating, speaking—seems well suited for computers. But until now, it was too hard for them too. The best “real-time” translating systems still do what’s called consecutive translation, in which they wait for each sentence to conclude before rendering its equivalent in another language. These systems provide quite accurate translations, but they’re slow.

Huang tells IEEE Spectrum that the big challenge in simultaneous interpretation comes from word order differences in various languages. “In the UN, there’s a famous joke that an interpreter who’s translating from German to English will pause, and seem to get stuck,” he says. “If you ask why, they say, ‘I’m waiting for the German verb.’” In English, the verb comes early in the sentence, he explains, while in German it comes at the very end of the sentence.

STACL gets around that problem by predicting the verb to come, based on all the sentences it has seen in the past. For their current paper, the Baidu researchers trained STACL on newswire articles, where the same story appeared in multiple languages. As a result, it’s good at making predictions about sentences dealing with international politics.

Huang gives an example of a Chinese sentence, which would be most directly translated as “Xi Jinping French president visit expresses appreciation.” STACL, however, would guess from the beginning of the sentence that the visit would go well, and translates it into English as “Xi Jinping expresses appreciation for the French president’s visit.”

For their current paper, the researchers demonstrated its capabilities in translating from Chinese to English (two languages with big differences in word order). “In principle, it can work on any language pair,” Huang says. “There’s data on all those other languages. We just haven’t run those experiments yet.”

Clearly, STACL can make mistakes. If the French president’s visit hadn’t gone well, and Xi Jinping instead expressed regret and dismay, the translation would have a glaring error. At the moment, it can’t correct its mistakes. “A human interpreter would apologize, but our current system doesn’t have the capability to revise an error,” Huang says.

However, the system is adjustable, and users will be able to make trade-offs between speed and accuracy. If STACL is programmed to have longer latency—to lag 5 words behind the original text instead of 3 words behind—it’s more likely to get things right.

It can also be made more accurate by training it in a particular subject, so that it understands the likely sentences that will appear in presentations at, say, a medical conference. “Just like a human simultaneous interpreter, it would need to do some homework before the event,” Huang says.

Huang says STACL will be demoed at a Baidu World conference on 1 November, where it will provide live simultaneous translation of the speeches. The aim is to eventually put this capability into consumers’ pockets. Baidu has previously shown off a prototype consumer device that does sentence-by-sentence translation, and Huang says his team plans to integrate STACL into that gadget.

Right now, STACL works on text-to-text translation and speech-to-text translation. To make it useful for a consumer device, the researchers want to master speech-to-speech translation. That will require integrating speech synthesis into the system. And when the speech is being synthesized only a few words at a time, without any knowledge of the whole sentence’s structure, it will be a challenge to make it sound natural.

Huang says his goal is to make instant translation services more readily accessible and affordable to the general public. But he notes that STACL is “not intended to replace human interpreters—especially for high-stakes situations that require precise and consistent translations.” After all, nobody wants an AI to be at the center of an international incident because it erroneously predicts Xi Jinping’s expressions of appreciation or regret.



Baidu's AI Can Do Simultaneous Translation Between Any Two Languages - IEEE Spectrum
 
Beijing firm unveils gait recognition product to help identify suspects
By Liu Caiyu Source:Global Times Published: 2018/10/26 14:09:40

1b92babd-c6d0-4e86-a1d8-db75940edcd6.jpeg
This product targets suspects by using gait recognition to monitor human postures and is on display in Beijing. Photo: Liu Caiyu/GT

A Beijing-based high-tech company released a security product on Friday using gait recognition technology to search for targets, which is likely to assist China's public security department in identifying suspects.

Developed by WATRIX, this product, called "Shuidi Shenjian" can target suspects by monitoring their posture as the suspects walk from a distance of up to 50 meters.

Different from facial recognition, the gait recognition technology is more flexible. It is capable of identifying targets from any angle regardless of if they cover their faces or wear different clothes or walk outside at night, without suspects being aware, Huang Yongzhen, CEO of the WATRIX, told the Global Times on Friday.

Huang said that the company had inked deals with public security departments in Beijing's Fengtai district and Shanghai. The public security department in Xinjiang also expressed interest in the security product.

The portable machine, weighing about 15 kilograms, can replace manual workers by quickly spotting suspects while they are walking. Users need to upload videos onto the machine first and offer the machine an example video of the target, then the machine can complete a search through one hour of video in 10 minutes. Its accuracy is about 94 percent.

But Huang said the technology still cannot detect targets in real-time videos, which is the next step of their research.

At present, the product has been piloted in the public security system for more than 1,000 hours, being used in the detection of more than 20 cases. It had retrieved 2,000G of public security videos so far.

The gait recognition technology can also be applied in the medical field by allowing medical personnel to examine whether a patient has fallen down and it can also be applied in oil fields to seek out intruders, as well as being used in designing smart home furniture, Huang noted.
 
AI start-up CloudWalk claims new international record for speech

Source:Global Times Published: 2018/10/29


Chinese artificial intelligence (AI) start-up CloudWalk Technology Co on Monday revealed that its new voice-recognition model achieved a new accuracy record, a fresh sign of the country's growing strength in AI.

The new model, known as Pyramidal-FSMN, had a word error rate of 2.97 percent, setting a new world record in the area of speech recognition technology based on the world's largest open source speech corpus Librispeech, read a press release sent to the Global Times on Monday.

The new milestone signaled a leap forward in speech recognition - an error rate of 5.9 percent is generally considered to equal human parity while professional transcribers who have received strict training post an error of about 3 percent. The numbers alone also marked a conspicuous advancement from previous efforts achieved by global industry giants including Microsoft and IBM.

Microsoft and IBM competed to claim the accuracy crown last year with speech recognition software falling in the ballpark of roughly 5 percent, based on the Switchboard corpus of telephone conversations.

The Chinese start-up, born out of the Chongqing Institute of Chinese Academy of Sciences, was only founded in 2015 and has over recent years established itself as a major face-recognition supplier.

http://www.globaltimes.cn/content/1125032.shtml

@qwerrty
 
Tech giants rally to authorities' call

By Ma Si and Zhou Lanxu | China Daily | Updated: 2018-11-02

5bdbd8e5a310eff3690419de.jpeg

Liu Qingfeng, chairman and CEO of iFlytek. [Photo/IC]

iFlytek chief says that leadership's emphasis on role of AI will put it on fast-growth track

Chinese tech heavyweights and startups said on Thursday that they will boost investment to promote original research and industrial applications of artificial intelligence, in response to the central authorities' call to build the nation into a leading AI power.

Liu Qingfeng, chairman and CEO of iFlytek, China's largest voice recognition company, said the top leadership's emphasis on AI's role in buoying overall social development will put it on a superfast-growth track.

"We will pour more resources into exploring 'no man's land' in the scientific territory, and work very hard on incorporating AI into a wide range of sectors," Liu said. The company has been devoting 25 percent of its annual revenue to R&D for six years.

The comments came after Xi Jinping, general secretary of the Communist Party of China Central Committee, on Wednesday called for more efforts to develop the new generation of AI to inject a fresh driving force into the country's high-quality economic growth.

China aims to grow the country's core AI industries to over 150 billion yuan ($22.15 billion) by 2020, 400 billion yuan by 2025, and 1 trillion yuan by 2030.

5bdbd8e5a310eff3690419e0.jpeg

Tang Xiao'ou, founder of SenseTime and a professor at the Chinese University of Hong Kong. [Photo provided to chinadaily.com.cn]

Tang Xiao'ou, founder of SenseTime and a professor at the Chinese University of Hong Kong, said scientific planning is needed to widen the use of AI. "The technology is not an independent industry. It must be tightly associated with traditional sectors to unleash its potential and to boost efficiency.

"More efforts are needed to strengthen the partnership between State-owned and private companies when exploring the application of AI," Tang added. The four-year-old company is partnering with the Massachusetts Institute of Technology to further advance research on computer vision and it is developing self-driving solutions in partnership with Japanese carmaker Honda.

China is building five national AI open innovation platforms by relying on Alibaba Group Holding Ltd in smart city technologies, Baidu Inc in self-driving technologies, Tencent Holdings Ltd in AI-enabled medical treatments, and iFlytek in voice-recognition technologies, as well as SenseTime in facial recognition technologies.

The nation is working hard to boost the application of AI in the automobile, robotics, healthcare and other sectors. In the first nine months of this year, China's industrial robot output increased 9.3 percent year-on-year, official data show.

On Thursday, A shares related to AI industries registered strong performances and led the rise of the market. Among sub-indices that went up more than 2 percent were those tracking the companies engaged in facial and speech recognition, cashier-free retailing, intelligent transportation, and cloud computing.

The sub-index of the robot industry rose by 2.14 percent, with eight companies in this sector jumping by their daily limits of 10 percent, according to financial information provider Wind Info.

http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/a/201811/02/WS5bdbaddba310eff3032861e5.html

@cirr
 
China's first AI theme park opens in Beijing

Source:Xinhua Published: 2018/11/5


China's first artificial intelligence (AI) theme park opened to public in early November, after 10 months renovation of a municipal park in northern Beijing.

Driverless shuttle buses, smart lamp posts that can record exercise data, and intelligent speakers that can respond to human instructions have been installed in Haidian Park, which covers about 34 hectares near the 4th Ring Road.

The district government of Haidian and Internet company Baidu signed an agreement in January to jointly explore "smart city" building. Haidian Park, which received about 1.2 million tourists last year, was chosen to run the pilot program.

A total of 10 government departments and companies participated in the renovation of the park over the past 10 months, said Che Jianguo from the district's park administration office.

In recent years, Chinese high-tech companies have set foot in the AI industry, while the central government also stressed in October that it would boost the development of the country's new generation of artificial intelligence.

http://www.globaltimes.cn/content/1125923.shtml
 
Huawei’s chipset consume only 200 watts in autonomous driving

Ramy From Gasgoo| November 08 , 2018


6367729587021421584737302.jpg


Shanghai (Gasgoo)- The Ascend 310 chip from Huawei is the most powerful AI SoC chip for edge computing scenarios, including autonomous driving, Yan Lida, Director of the Board at Huawei and President of Huawei Enterprise Business Group, said at the Fifth World Internet Conference, held in Wuzhen, Zhejiang Province.

At the conference, the Ascend 310 was granted the conference’s World Leading Internet Scientific and Technological Achievement award. In October, Huawei unveiled its AI strategy and full-stack portfolio, including a series of chips, cloud services and products. The Ascend 310 is the first product of the Ascend family.

Nowadays, the most typical edge computing scenarios includes security and protection, autonomous driving and smart manufacturing, all of which require stringent conditions in space, consumption and computing capability. The Ascend 310 boasts a maximum of 16TOPS on-site calculations and supports the identification of over 200 different objects at the same time, including human beings, cars, barriers and traffic signs. What’s more, the chip can process thousands of pictures within one second.

The Ascend 310 can offer cost-efficient and powerful computing capability under various real-life scenarios, such as running vehicles and complex scientific research. In October, Huawei teamed up with Audi to road test L4 autonomous driving vehicles equipped with Huawei’s Mobile Data Center (MDC) computing unit. Huawei said that estimate showed that the 310 chipset can only consume 200 watts of power to support L4 autonomous driving.

http://autonews.gasgoo.com/70015351.html
 
China a world leader in facial recognition algorithms
By Liu Xuanzun Source:Global Times Published: 2018/11/20 18:38:40

Design can recognize 10 million people without error

60cd5318-131a-41dc-97d7-745e97d6c3b2.jpeg
A screen shows visitors being filmed by AI (Artificial Intelligence) security cameras with facial recognition technology at the 14th China International Exhibition on Public Safety and Security at the China International Exhibition Center in Beijing on Wednesday. Photo: AFP

China is leading the world in facial recognition algorithms with its best algorithm able to recognize 10 million people without a single mistake in less than a second.

The top five of the 39 facial recognition algorithms in the world come from China, according to the Face Recognition Vendor Test (FRVT) conducted by the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) under the US Department of Commerce, which released the test results for 2018 on Friday.

YITU Technology, a Shanghai-based company that claimed both the top and second spot on the list, told the Global Times in a statement on Tuesday that its top algorithm can accurately recognize nearly every person in a sample base of 10 million.

In comparison, "it is very likely for a human brain to make a mistake in recognizing the identities of 100 people," the company said.

Algorithms from Beijing-based company SenseTime won the third and fourth spot, while the Chinese Academy of Sciences' Shenzhen Institutes of Advanced Technology (SIAT) claimed fifth in the test.

YITU said that high facial recognition accuracy means that users gain better experiences when using related products.

For example, when a user uses facial ID for payment on a smartphone, the device will not authorize the payment for someone else with a similar appearance as the user, the company noted.

YITU used models that are used in actual products during the FRVT, the company said. It proves the real capabilities of its algorithms in real-life applications, according to the company.

China is heading the Sharp Eyes project, which uses surveillance cameras, artificial intelligence, facial recognition and big data to provide security and conduct comprehensive governance that fulfill citizens' miscellaneous demands.

Police in Guiyang, Southwest China's Guizhou Province are already deploying a facial recognition system that can catch fugitives and suspects who have managed to hide their identities for years.

The command center of Guiyang Public Security Bureau used the system to give orders to community policemen after a 4-year-old boy was reported missing in February. The boy was found and returned to his home by police within half an hour.

Some 39 companies and institutes around the world participated in the FRVT, including Russian company NtechLab, US company Ever AI and German company Cognitec, according to the NIST leaderboard.

The FRVT is considered to be the gold standard in the global facial recognition industry, Chinese news website thepaper.cn said.

The FRVT is aimed at measuring the performance of automated face recognition technologies applied to a wide range of civil, law enforcement and homeland security applications, including verification of visa images, de-duplication of passports, recognition across photojournalism images, and identification of child exploitation victims, according to the NIST website.
 
Chinese AI promises hope for short-sighted children
Xinhua, November 20, 2018

Will your kids be short-sighted? A Chinese artificial intelligence (AI) model made from millions of eyesight records could help to predict whether they'll be needing glasses.

Myopia is the most common visual impairment in children. China has an unprecedented rate of nearsightedness. A recent World Health Organization report showed about 600 million Chinese, almost half the population, are short-sighted, including more than 70 percent of high school or college students and 40 percent of primary school children.


Current approaches to curb vision loss include eyedrops, glasses, contact lenses and surgery, which can be effective, but have side effects, such as higher recurrence rates, eye infections and other ailments.


If short-sightedness could be forecast, doctors could intervene with appropriate therapies to help reduce the risk of high myopia, which is measured by a focusing power at -6 diopters and above.


After analyzing 1.25 million eyesight records over three years, researchers from Zhongshan Ophthalmic Center of Sun Yat-sen University, have identified myopia development rules, and built an AI model to predict the condition in children and teenagers.


The study involved children aged 5 to 18 who had eyesight checks from 2005 to 2015 in eight of the largest ophthalmic centers in south China's Guangdong Province.


The researchers discovered that nearsightedness usually occurs at age 7, and rapidly develops before 10. It can grow to -3 diopters in the teenage years and up to -6 diopters in the 20s.


There were few cases of high myopia among school-age children, and researchers did not find the onset or development age of high myopia.


Researchers used age, the diopter and annual myopia progression rate as the main variables to develop an algorithm to predict myopia degrees over 10 years and the possibility of high myopia before 18 years.


To test the model, developers fed it about 687,000 eyesight records of more than 129,000 people.


The diagnostic accuracy was 90 percent within three years, and 80 percent within 10 years. It can also predict high myopia eight years in advance, providing a scientific basis for intervention, said study leader Liu Yizhi.


The research team made the AI model public this month and demonstrated how it works with the case of a 5-year-old boy who was nearsighted and began wearing glasses at -1 diopters last year.


After a researcher input two myopia records taken at least 12 months apart, within seconds the model showed that the boy's diopters might reach -3 diopter after 10 years, but he had little risk of high myopia.


High myopia usually progresses fast, and can cause blindness or other severe eye conditions, said Lin Haotian, first author of the study. It can also be associated with genes.


The risk of children developing high myopia is a great concern to Chinese parents, with thousands of students seeking care at hospital and ophthalmic clinics during school holidays.


The rise in myopia is partly driven by children spending more time reading, studying or glued to computer and smartphone screens.


Research indicates that effective intervention to curb worsening myopia is spending more time outdoors.


"Studies have proved that if children have an additional 40 minutes outside every day, the myopia rate will decrease by 23 percent in three years," said Liu.


The AI model can also help the limited number of specialists. By the end of 2014, China had just 36,000 ophthalmologists, with 70 percent in large cities.


Most doctors spend most of their time treating severe eye conditions, but little time on prevention and control of myopia.


"The AI model will help release the workload for doctors and improve diagnostic accuracy," said Liu.


Last year, Liu's team, and researchers from other universities, unveiled an AI system that diagnoses cataracts with high accuracy.


The myopia prediction model will soon be put into clinical use.


The study was published in the international journal PLOS Medicine.
 
AI textbooks for Chinese kindergarteners released

2018-11-22

An experimental AI textbook series designed for students from kindergartens to high schools came to light recently when a photo of the textbook appeared online, sparking discussions about the possibility of kindergarten children learning AI.

The series printed by Henan People's Publishing House includes 33 textbooks, two textbooks a year for students in kindergartens and those in primary, middle and high schools, but one textbook a year for students at vocational schools.

Experts from the Institute of Automation under the Chinese Academy of Sciences, Google and some universities offered opinions on the series, which was finished in three years, according to aiera.com.cn, an information exchange and think tank platform focusing on AI technology.

The textbooks rely on a cloud platform to update their embedded digital content in real time. The electronic textbooks are updated every six months, while paper versions are updated each year.

Students can also learn Scratch and Python integrated development environment (IDE) on its supporting cloud platform.

However, some internet users exclaimed that it was too early to learn AI at such a young age. "After all most of them can't even do basic arithmetic," an internet user said on Sina Weibo, China's equivalent to Twitter.

Currently, about 67.5 percent of children in the US in kindergarten through 12th grade have received online programming education.

Taking Scratch, the world's leading children's programming language as an example, its penetration rate is the highest in the US at 44.80 percent. In the UK it's 9.31 percent, while in China it is only 0.96 percent.

Significant progress is being reported in China in AI technological research and development. As early as 2016, the government had estimated that demand for AI professionals may surge to 5 million in the coming years.

Authorities have already moved to promote AI-related education. The central government last year made a plan to include AI courses in primary and secondary schools.

In June, China published its first nine-chapter AI textbook for high school students, which was produced through joint efforts by the research center for MOOC at East China Normal University and AI startup SenseTime Group.

The paper.cn reported Tuesday that a 10-volume series designed for primary and secondary school students was recently released in Shanghai, and the textbooks are to be introduced to hundreds of schools across the country next year.

(CHINA DAILY)
 
First AI textbook series to be introduced into Chinese schools
CGTN
2018-11-27 20:59 GMT+8

1bb8026406494316a0ddbad456ec2641.jpg

In order to educate the future generation about the rapid development of artificial intelligence (AI) technology, China has introduced its first comprehensive AI textbook series designed for primary and secondary schools.

Starting spring semester next year, hundreds of elementary and high schools across China will incorporate AI courses into their school's curriculum using a 10-volume series, Shanghai-based media outlet the Paper reported.

Six volumes within the series have been published and piloted over the fall semester at a number of middle schools in Shanghai where the publisher East China Normal University Press is based. Students reportedly welcomed the fun, innovative courses.

90b5121e480f4f84a20c4ad0f450ce3f.jpg

Six published volumes of China's first AI textbook series. /East China Normal University Press Photo

"The reason we want our students to systematically gain AI-related knowledge is to prepare them for a future where robots roam around and AI application prevails," Professor Wang Qingji, the chief editor of the series said.

Wang added that experienced educators, AI technology experts and government officials in the education sector were involved in the compilation project, so the textbooks could provide comprehensive, targeted knowledge for children based on their different cognitive levels.

The AI textbook series covers a wide range of topics ranging from robot pets, AI engineering to the more advanced programming language of Python.

China hopes to become a world leader in artificial intelligence by 2030. To reach that goal, the country has stepped up its effort to equip its future generations with curiosity and practical knowledge of the field.

Last year, the State Council launched an ambitious plan to require elementary and secondary schools to incorporate AI courses in their school's curriculum.
 
China debuts AI-driven ground penetrating radar to prevent soil disasters

Source:Global Times Published: 2018/11/29


Eagle Eye-A, a ground-penetrating radar using artificial intelligence (AI), has been developed in China, aiming at effectively preventing road cave-ins and accidents related to underground pipelines.

The 35th Institute of the 3rd Academy, China Aerospace Science and Industry Corporation announced Tuesday the debut of Eagle Eye-A, which can scan petrol and gas pipelines underground and detect potential perils such as road cave-ins in urban underground space.

The AI module mounted in the radar generates a real-time report, offering a panoramic view of the pipeline network underground.

Preliminary statistics show that a total of more than 160 accidents due to underground pipelines and over 60 road collapses happened in China from July to October 2018.

As China's first ground-penetrating radar with AI, Eagle Eye-A has an accuracy as high as 90 percent and a false alarm rate as low as 5 percent.

The AI processing system enables the radar to proactively detect, spot and mark exceptional information and generates an immediate report.

Jiao Xiaoliang, director of the institute's science and technology committee, said the newly-developed radar is capable of detecting soil diseases and pipelines as deep as six meters underground, with a fast response and no harm to the environment.

Intelligent sensors such as a laser gas detection module can be installed in the Eagle Eye-A in a patrol vehicle to spot leaky pipes, combining a detector for combustible gas in the air and the vision of the underground pipelines scanned by the radar.

http://www.globaltimes.cn/content/1129584.shtml
 
China debuts AI-driven ground penetrating radar to prevent soil disasters
Source:Global Times Published: 2018/11/29 19:32:11

Eagle Eye-A, a ground-penetrating radar using artificial intelligence (AI), has been developed in China, aiming at effectively preventing road cave-ins and accidents related to underground pipelines.

The 35th Institute of the 3rd Academy, China Aerospace Science and Industry Corporation announced Tuesday the debut of Eagle Eye-A, which can scan petrol and gas pipelines underground and detect potential perils such as road cave-ins in urban underground space.

The AI module mounted in the radar generates a real-time report, offering a panoramic view of the pipeline network underground.

Preliminary statistics show that a total of more than 160 accidents due to underground pipelines and over 60 road collapses happened in China from July to October 2018.

As China's first ground-penetrating radar with AI, Eagle Eye-A has an accuracy as high as 90 percent and a false alarm rate as low as 5 percent.

The AI processing system enables the radar to proactively detect, spot and mark exceptional information and generates an immediate report.

Jiao Xiaoliang, director of the institute's science and technology committee, said the newly-developed radar is capable of detecting soil diseases and pipelines as deep as six meters underground, with a fast response and no harm to the environment.

Intelligent sensors such as a laser gas detection module can be installed in the Eagle Eye-A in a patrol vehicle to spot leaky pipes, combining a detector for combustible gas in the air and the vision of the underground pipelines scanned by the radar.

DtPOVFGXcAA9p2-.jpg
 
Last edited:
Chinese AI gives nearsighted children a glimpse of the future
By YUAN QUAN/JING HUAIQIAO | China Daily | Updated: 2018-12-07 09:05
f_art.gif
w_art.gif
in_art.gif
more_art.gif


5c09c744a310eff36909e3c7.jpeg

[Photo/IC]

If you are concerned that your child will be nearsighted, a new artificial intelligence model developed from millions of eyesight records could help predict whether your offspring will need glasses.

Myopia is the most common visual impairment in children, and China has an unprecedented rate of nearsightedness. A recent World Health Organization report showed that about 600 million Chinese, almost half the population, are nearsighted, including more than 70 percent of high school and college students, and 40 percent of primary school children.

Current approaches to curbing vision loss include eyedrops, glasses, contact lenses and surgery. However, while these can be effective, they have side effects, such as higher rates of recurrence, eye infections and other ailments.

If nearsightedness could be predicted, medical professionals could intervene with appropriate treatments to help reduce the risk of high myopia, which is measured by a focusing power of-6 diopters, a measurement of the optical power of a lens, and higher.

After analyzing 1.25 million eyesight records over three years, researchers from Zhongshan Ophthalmic Center at Sun Yat-sen University in Guangdong province have identified myopia development rules, and built an AI model to predict the condition in children and teenagers.

The study, published in the international journal PLOS Medicine, involved children ages 5 to 18 who had eyesight checks from 2005 to 2015 in eight of the largest ophthalmic centers in the southern province.

The researchers discovered that nearsightedness usually occurs at age 7, and rapidly develops before age 10. It can grow to-3 diopters during the teenage years and up to-6 diopters in the 20s.

There were few cases of high myopia among school-age children, and researchers did not find the onset or development age of high myopia.

The researchers used age, the diopter and annual myopia progression rates as the main variables to develop an algorithm to predict degrees of myopia over 10 years and the possibility of high myopia before 18 years.

To test the model, the developers fed it about 687,000 eyesight records of more than 129,000 people.

The diagnostic accuracy was 90 percent within three years, and 80 percent within 10 years. It can also predict high myopia eight years in advance, providing a scientific basis for intervention, study leader Liu Yizhi said.

The research team recently made the AI model public and demonstrated how it works by using the case of a 5-year-old boy who was nearsighted and began wearing glasses at-1 diopter last year.

A researcher inputted two myopia records taken at least 12 months apart, and within seconds the model showed that the boy's diopters might reach-3 after 10 years, but he had little risk of high myopia.

High myopia usually progresses rapidly, and can cause blindness or other severe eye conditions, said Lin Haotian, the lead author of the study. The condition can also be associated with genetics.

The risk of children developing high myopia is a great concern for Chinese parents, with thousands of students seeking care at hospitals and ophthalmic clinics during school holidays.

The rise in myopia is partly driven by children spending more time reading, studying, or glued to computer and smartphone screens.

Research indicates that an effective way of curbing worsening myopia is to spend more time outdoors.

"Studies have proved that if children have an additional 40 minutes outside every day, the myopia rate will fall by 23 percent in three years," Liu said.

The AI model could also help combat the limited number of specialists. By the end of 2014, China had just 36,000 ophthalmologists, with 70 percent of them working in big cities.

Many spend most of their time treating severe eye conditions, but little on the prevention and control of myopia.

"The AI model will help ease the workload for ophthalmologists and improve diagnostic accuracy," Liu said.

Last year, Liu's team and researchers from other universities unveiled an AI system that diagnoses cataracts with a high degree of accuracy.

The myopia prediction model will be put into clinical use soon.
 
Xuhui releases 'T-plan' for AI development
Yang Jian 11:39 UTC+8, 2018-12-07

7ea5d8c7-6188-45e8-befb-603343cd46c6_0.jpg
Government and company officials jointly illuminate the landmark AI Tower on the West Bund waterfront, to house AI tech firms and become a global AI development and exhibition center.

Shanghai's first artificial intelligence town will be built in Beiyang area in Xuhui District, featuring AI firms, labs and a residential community with wide AI applications, officials said on Thursday.

It is part of a "T-plan" to further support the development of AI firms and attract more to come to the district. The T-plan is interpreted as Top and Tomorrow, (AI) Tower and Town, as well as Tech and Talent, district director Fang Shizhong said.

The Beiyang AI Town, covering 600,000 square meters along the Dianpu River, will gather technological companies mainly focusing on brain simulation, IntelliSense and automated driving. AI technologies will be applied in medical, finance, transport, media and business industries within the town.

The site, formerly known for the Beiyang wharf, an industrial port, will preserve some of the warehouses, cranes and other industrial relics and convert historical structures into education centers and commercial facilities.

The project is part of the Xuhui government’s efforts to develop into an “AI highland.”

In another key project, a 200-meter-tall landmark building, the AI Tower, has already been completed on Longyao Road in the West Bund and will become a global AI development and exhibition center. Multinational headquarters of AI companies will be based in the building.

The first batch of companies, including Microsoft Research Asia, attended a lighting ceremony for the landmark building.

Around the building, Xuhui District will build a West Bund “Intelligence Valley” covering a million square meters along the Huangpu River for AI industries, said Fang.

Xuhui announced it will subsidize at most 20 million yuan a year for each AI-related project, which will become one of the city’s highest government subsidies for a single project. Newly developed AI technologies will be allowed to be used for government affairs, urban management and traffic.

Local hospitals, schools and administrative service centers will also be encouraged to initially use AI technologies, the district government said.

Xuhui will also offer 1,500 talent apartments a year with low rent for professionals of the AI companies. The first batch of about 2,000 low-rent apartments at the West Bund are ready to accommodate professionals, with the lowest rents, at 1,800 yuan per month, in sharp contrast to the city’s usual sky-high housing prices.

Xuhui has attracted one fourth of the city’s total of 403 key AI companies, including internet giants Tencent, Netease, Xiaomi, Microsoft and Amazon. The gross output of these AI firms in Xuhui is expected to reach 21 billion yuan in 2018, a 30 percent increase year on year. The 2018 World Artificial Intelligence Conference was also held in the West Bund in Xuhui between September 17 and 19.

Source: SHINE Editor: Shen Ke
 

Country Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom