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China's Race for Artificial Intelligence (AI) Technology

China’s Artificial-Intelligence Boom

The country’s universities and tech giants are starting to surpass American ones when it comes to researching and implementing AI.

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Chinese tech company Baidu has invested heavily in artificial intelligence research.Aly Song / Reuters

SARAH ZHANG

FEB 16, 2017

Each winter, hundreds of AI researchers from around the world convene at the annual meeting of the Association of the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence. Last year, a minor crisis erupted over the schedule, when AAAI announced that 2017’s meeting would take place in New Orleans in late January. The location was fine. The dates happened to conflict with Chinese New Year.

The holiday might not have been a deal breaker in the past, but Chinese researchers have become so integral to the meeting, it could not go on without them. They had to reschedule. “Nobody would have put AAAI on Christmas day,” says current AAAI president Subbarao Kambhampati. “Our organization had to almost turn on a dime and change the conference venue to hold it a week later.”

The 2017 AAAI meeting—which ultimately relocated to San Francisco—wrapped up just last week. And as expected, Chinese researchers had a strong showing in the historically U.S.-dominated conference. A nearly equal number of accepted papers came from researchers based in China and the U.S. “This is pretty surprising and impressive given how different it was even three, four years back,” says Rao.

China’s rapid rise up the ranks of AI research has people taking notice. In October, the Obama White House released a “strategic plan” for AI research, which noted that the U.S. no longer leads the world in journal articles on “deep learning,” a particularly hot subset of AI research right now. The country that had overtaken the U.S.? China, of course.

It’s not just academic research. Chinese tech companies are betting on AI, too. Baidu (a Chinese search-engine company often likened to Google), Didi (often likened to Uber), and Tencent (maker of the mega-popular messaging app WeChat) have all set up their own AI research labs. With millions of customers, these companies have access to the huge amount of data that training AI to detect patterns requires.

Like the Microsofts and Googles of the world, Chinese tech companies see enormous potential in AI. It could undergird a whole set of transformative technologies in the coming decades, from facial recognition to autonomous cars.“I have a hard time thinking of an industry we cannot transform with AI,” says Andrew Ng, chief scientist at Baidu. Ng previously cofounded Coursera and Google Brain, the company’s deep learning project. Now he directs Baidu’s AI research out of Sunnyvale, California, right in Silicon Valley.

* * *

China’s success in AI has been partly fueled by the government’s overall investment in scientific research at its universities. Over the past decade, government spending on research has grown by double digits on average every year. Funding of science and technology research continues to be a major priority, as outlined by the the Five-Year Plan unveiled this past March.

When Rao first started seeing Chinese researchers at international AI meetings, he recalls they were usually from Tsinghua and Peking University, considered the MIT and Harvard of China. Now, he sees papers from researchers all over the country, not just the most elite schools. Machine learning—which includes deep learning—has been an especially popular topic lately. “The number of people who got interested in applied machine learning has tremendously increased across China,” says Rao. This is the same uptick that the White House noticed in its report on a strategic plan for AI research.

“I have a hard time thinking of an industry we cannot transform with AI.”

Chinese tech companies are part of the infusion of research dollars to universities, too. At Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, computer scientist Qiang Yang collaborates with Tencent, which sponsors scholarships for students in his lab.

The students get access to mountains of data from WeChat, the messaging app from Tencent that is akin to Facebook, iMessage, and Venmo all rolled into one. (“With AI, they can’t do it without a lot of data and a platform to test it on,” says Yang, which is why industry collaboration is so key.) In return, Tencent gets a direct line to some of the most innovative research coming out of academic labs. And of course, some of these students end up working at Tencent when they graduate.

The quantity of Chinese AI research has grown dramatically, but researchers in the U.S. are still responsible for a lot of the most fundamental groundbreaking work. “The very clever ideas on changing network architecture, I see those in the U.S.,” says Ng. What Chinese researchers have been very good at doing is seizing on an idea—like machine learning—and cranking out papers on its different applications.

Yet as the research matures in China, Ng says, it is also becoming its own distinct community. After a recent international meeting in Barcelona, he recalls seeing Chinese language write-ups of the talks circulate right way. He never found any in English. The language issue creates a kind of asymmetry: Chinese researchers usually speak English so they have the benefit of access to all the work disseminated in English. The English-speaking community, on the other hand, is much less likely to have access to work within the Chinese AI community.

“China has a fairly deep awareness of what’s happening in the English-speaking world, but the opposite is not true,” says Ng. He points out that Baidu has rolled out machine translation and voice recognition services powered by AI—but when Google and Microsoft, respectively, did so later, the American companies got a lot more publicity.

“The velocity of work is much faster in China than in most of Silicon Valley.”

And when it comes to actually shipping new features, China companies can move more quickly. “The velocity of work is much faster in China than in most of Silicon Valley,” says Ng. “When you spot a business opportunity in China, the window of time you have to respond usually very short—shorter in China than the United States.”

Yang chalks it up to China’s highly competitive ecosystem. WeChat, for example, has built a set of features around QR codes (yes, really), chat, payments, and friend discovery that make it indispensable to daily life in China. American social media companies only wish they had that kind of loyalty. “Product managers at Tencent have good sense of what customers want, and they can can quickly turn technology into reality,” says Yang. “This cycle is very short.” And to stay competitive, they’re primed to integrate AI to improve their products. Whether Chinese tech companies use the AI wave to break into the international market remains to be seen—but they’re already using AI to compete for customers in China.

In the academic world, AAAI has now taken steps to make sure Chinese researchers have input on the meetings. The exact date of Chinese New Year changes every year, but it’s always in January or February, when the AAAI meeting usually takes place. Can’t have them conflicting again.

https://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2017/02/china-artificial-intelligence/516615/

@Bussard Ramjet :D
 
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And as expected, Chinese researchers had a strong showing in the historically U.S.-dominated conference. A nearly equal number of accepted papers came from researchers based in China and the U.S. “This is pretty surprising and impressive given how different it was even three, four years back,” says Rao.

Hopefully, Trump will likely shoo away some of those foreign-born researchers back to where they came from, which will include lots of compatriots from Mainland and Taiwan.

It is also obvious that China's companies offer a better development prospects for young talents because the explosive boom and disruptive creativity will continue to shift to China.
 
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Chinese companies aim to take lead in development of world-changing technology
By Zhang Ye Source: Global Times Published: 2017/2/15 19:38:40

AI achievements
With artificial intelligence (AI) widely perceived to be a technology that will shape the future of how people live and work, companies in China have been beefing up investment in the sector in recent years. Scientists believe that the odds favor Chinese companies to be able to match their US counterparts in the AI technology race.

419e7d78-91ef-49da-b09c-874c660a6bd9.jpeg

A man introduces "city brain" technology in Hangzhou, capital of East China's Zhejiang Province,
in October 2016. The technology was designed to ease traffic congestion in cities. Photo: CFP

While US tech giants like Google and Microsoft are racing to infuse artificial intelligence into their core products, tech companies in China are keen to ready their artificial neutral network to solve complicated problems of city governance and healthcare.

Traffic congestion, a global problem that troubles urban residents, is an area that has long been a focus of the artificial intelligence (AI) team of Aliyun, Alibaba Group Holding's cloud computing unit.

The AI team of Aliyun told the Global Times on Monday that it has made progress in fixing the problem over the past year as its self-developed AI system, dubbed ET, is breaking new ground in areas like video recognition and traffic prediction.

In Guangzhou, capital of South China's Guangdong Province, at the intersection of Nanhua Middle Road and Baogang Avenue, one of the busiest crossings in the city, the average traffic jam index monitored by local authorities between 9 am and 1 pm fell 25.75 percent after using ET in September in 2016, the team disclosed in a statement.

How does this work?

Hua Xiansheng, a visual computing scientist with Aliyun, explained to the press in a meeting in October 2016 that after consistently learning and analyzing large amounts of the city's transportation data, ET built a virtual model of the city that is able to predict how many vehicles will be on the roads at any given time.

Based on those predictions, the computer will then come up "smart" measures such as intelligently controlling traffic lights to help traffic flow better, Hua said.

Reshaping city governance is just a part of Aliyun's AI empire.

Led by Zhou Jingren, who was part of the research group on Microsoft's Bing search infrastructure, the AI team vowed to train ET into the successor of Jack Ma Yun after 20 years.

Betting on AI

Alibaba has already shown its ambition to develop AI.

Another tech giant, Tencent Holdings, led a group that made a $10 million investment in February 2016 to fund the AI start-up Diffbot in the US.

Baidu Inc, which some consider the Chinese equivalent of Google, has also been devoted to AI for a long time, with Andrew Ng, the former leader of Google's Brain project, leading its research. Ng joined Baidu in 2014, the same year the company reportedly invested nearly 7 billion yuan ($1.08 billion) in cutting-edge technologies such as AI.

Unlike Alibaba, Baidu is keen to use AI to improve the healthcare industry.

China's healthcare has massive potential that can be fulfilled with AI, Baidu founder Robin Li Yanhong said in a meeting on February 8.

In October 2016, the company has released an app known as Melody, designed to act like a medical assistant. The app has an AI-powered chat program that can help collect a patient's symptoms and then provide advice to a doctor. It is not a replacement for doctors yet.

Li predicted a future in which AI is used to diagnose illnesses and recommend treatment based on a gene database.

Baidu's advances were underscored in January when Lu Qi, a veteran AI expert, left Microsoft to join the Chinese company as its COO.

The Chinese search engine powerhouse is now considered to be the leader of the pack among Chinese Internet giants in the race to develop AI technology, Forbes reported on Monday.

What's interesting about AI at this point in its development is that leading technology companies are not the only players.

"As long as your innovative capabilities are strong enough to stay on the cutting edge, you don't have to worry about competition or copycatting from big rivals," Xu Li, CEO of Beijing-based AI start-up SenseTime Group, told the Global Times.

With more than 50 researchers and more than 80 engineers who used to work for Microsoft and Google, Xu's team have made notable achievements in image recognition that have been widely applied in surveillance by governments and companies.

He said that SenseTime's supercomputer DeepLink, which employs 200 graphic processing units (GPU), can recognize 4 million faces in six hours, calculating faster than AlphaGo's 170 GPU-powered computer.

Odds in China's favor

Scientists believe that Chinese companies will have a chance to match or surpass their US competitors in the AI era.

"China [with the world's largest online population] can provide larger amounts of behavioral data than the US, which will put Chinese firms in an advantageous position in the AI battle," Chu Min, a scientist with the Aliyun AI team, told the Global Times on Monday.

As everyone knows, AI needs data to learn.

As of December 2016, China has 731 million Internet users, equal to the population of the European Union, with an Internet penetration rate of 53.2 percent, according to a report issued by the China Internet Network Center in late January.

In 2016, 496 million Internet users made payments with their smartphones, 168 million hailed rides and 239 million received government services via mobile apps.

In addition, the Chinese government has moved toward a quick adoption of new technologies, which will bring about new opportunities, Xu said, referring to China's "Made In China 2025" plan.

"Another thing in China's favor is that top AI talent, at least those who are Chinese, will return to China, as Trump administration's immigration policy has already sparked fear among immigrants," Yang Jing, an industry expert and the founder of Ai Era, which focuses on AI technology, told the Global Times on Monday.

In the US, AI professors expressed concern over the future of the technology's development, with some worrying that the Trump administration will "dramatically" cut funding for research in the area, according to an article published by the US IT trade publication TechRepublic in November in 2016.

China's AI market is expected to grow to 38 billion yuan in 2018, up from 23.9 billion yuan in 2016, according to a report issued by Beijing-based CCID Consulting in late January.

Experts like Xiang Yang, an AI analyst with CCID, believes there are still some obstacles ahead.

"We have indeed achieved some world-class cutting-edge technologies in the areas like speech and image recognition. But when it comes to core hardware, such as the GPUs we use to run those AI technologies, they are all originally designed by US companies," Xiang told the Global Times on Monday.

Xiang called on the central government to issue more detailed policy support and guidance for the AI industry to attract sufficient private funding to speed up the development of the technology.

.
 
.
Chinese companies aim to take lead in development of world-changing technology
By Zhang Ye Source:Global Times Published: 2017/2/15

AI achievements

With artificial intelligence (AI) widely perceived to be a technology that will shape the future of how people live and work, companies in China have been beefing up investment in the sector in recent years. Scientists believe that the odds favor Chinese companies to be able to match their US counterparts in the AI technology race.


419e7d78-91ef-49da-b09c-874c660a6bd9.jpeg


A man introduces "city brain" technology in Hangzhou, capital of East China's Zhejiang Province, in October 2016. The technology was designed to ease traffic congestion in cities. Photo: CFP

While US tech giants like Google and Microsoft are racing to infuse artificial intelligence into their core products, tech companies in China are keen to ready their artificial neutral network to solve complicated problems of city governance and healthcare.

Traffic congestion, a global problem that troubles urban residents, is an area that has long been a focus of the artificial intelligence (AI) team of Aliyun, Alibaba Group Holding's cloud computing unit.

The AI team of Aliyun told the Global Times on Monday that it has made progress in fixing the problem over the past year as its self-developed AI system, dubbed ET, is breaking new ground in areas like video recognition and traffic prediction.

In Guangzhou, capital of South China's Guangdong Province, at the intersection of Nanhua Middle Road and Baogang Avenue, one of the busiest crossings in the city, the average traffic jam index monitored by local authorities between 9 am and 1 pm fell 25.75 percent after using ET in September in 2016, the team disclosed in a statement.

How does this work?

Hua Xiansheng, a visual computing scientist with Aliyun, explained to the press in a meeting in October 2016 that after consistently learning and analyzing large amounts of the city's transportation data, ET built a virtual model of the city that is able to predict how many vehicles will be on the roads at any given time.

Based on those predictions, the computer will then come up "smart" measures such as intelligently controlling traffic lights to help traffic flow better, Hua said.

Reshaping city governance is just a part of Aliyun's AI empire.

Led by Zhou Jingren, who was part of the research group on Microsoft's Bing search infrastructure, the AI team vowed to train ET into the successor of Jack Ma Yun after 20 years.

Betting on AI

Alibaba has already shown its ambition to develop AI.

Another tech giant, Tencent Holdings, led a group that made a $10 million investment in February 2016 to fund the AI start-up Diffbot in the US.

Baidu Inc, which some consider the Chinese equivalent of Google, has also been devoted to AI for a long time, with Andrew Ng, the former leader of Google's Brain project, leading its research. Ng joined Baidu in 2014, the same year the company reportedly invested nearly 7 billion yuan ($1.08 billion) in cutting-edge technologies such as AI.

Unlike Alibaba, Baidu is keen to use AI to improve the healthcare industry.

China's healthcare has massive potential that can be fulfilled with AI, Baidu founder Robin Li Yanhong said in a meeting on February 8.

In October 2016, the company has released an app known as Melody, designed to act like a medical assistant. The app has an AI-powered chat program that can help collect a patient's symptoms and then provide advice to a doctor. It is not a replacement for doctors yet.

Li predicted a future in which AI is used to diagnose illnesses and recommend treatment based on a gene database.

Baidu's advances were underscored in January when Lu Qi, a veteran AI expert, left Microsoft to join the Chinese company as its COO.

The Chinese search engine powerhouse is now considered to be the leader of the pack among Chinese Internet giants in the race to develop AI technology, Forbes reported on Monday.

What's interesting about AI at this point in its development is that leading technology companies are not the only players.

"As long as your innovative capabilities are strong enough to stay on the cutting edge, you don't have to worry about competition or copycatting from big rivals," Xu Li, CEO of Beijing-based AI start-up SenseTime Group, told the Global Times.

With more than 50 researchers and more than 80 engineers who used to work for Microsoft and Google, Xu's team have made notable achievements in image recognition that have been widely applied in surveillance by governments and companies.

He said that SenseTime's supercomputer DeepLink, which employs 200 graphic processing units (GPU), can recognize 4 million faces in six hours, calculating faster than AlphaGo's 170 GPU-powered computer.

Odds in China's favor

Scientists believe that Chinese companies will have a chance to match or surpass their US competitors in the AI era.

"China [with the world's largest online population] can provide larger amounts of behavioral data than the US, which will put Chinese firms in an advantageous position in the AI battle," Chu Min, a scientist with the Aliyun AI team, told the Global Times on Monday.

As everyone knows, AI needs data to learn.

As of December 2016, China has 731 million Internet users, equal to the population of the European Union, with an Internet penetration rate of 53.2 percent, according to a report issued by the China Internet Network Center in late January.

In 2016, 496 million Internet users made payments with their smartphones, 168 million hailed rides and 239 million received government services via mobile apps.

In addition, the Chinese government has moved toward a quick adoption of new technologies, which will bring about new opportunities, Xu said, referring to China's "Made In China 2025" plan.

"Another thing in China's favor is that top AI talent, at least those who are Chinese, will return to China, as Trump administration's immigration policy has already sparked fear among immigrants," Yang Jing, an industry expert and the founder of Ai Era, which focuses on AI technology, told the Global Times on Monday.

In the US, AI professors expressed concern over the future of the technology's development, with some worrying that the Trump administration will "dramatically" cut funding for research in the area, according to an article published by the US IT trade publication TechRepublic in November in 2016.

China's AI market is expected to grow to 38 billion yuan in 2018, up from 23.9 billion yuan in 2016, according to a report issued by Beijing-based CCID Consulting in late January.

Experts like Xiang Yang, an AI analyst with CCID, believes there are still some obstacles ahead.

"We have indeed achieved some world-class cutting-edge technologies in the areas like speech and image recognition. But when it comes to core hardware, such as the GPUs we use to run those AI technologies, they are all originally designed by US companies," Xiang told the Global Times on Monday.

Xiang called on the central government to issue more detailed policy support and guidance for the AI industry to attract sufficient private funding to speed up the development of the technology.

***
 
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Chinese Smart Robot Maker CloudMinds Creates CI-based Robots by Upgrading from AI to CI

Feb 15, 2017, 00:59 ET

BEIJING, Feb. 15, 2017 /PRNewswire/ -- The top-notch R&D team at CloudMinds, a China-based firm specialized in the research, development and manufacturing of cloud intelligence (CI)-based applications, has created a CI ecosystem thanks to investments from several investors, including SoftBank Group Corp., the Japanese multinational telecommunications and Internet firm. SoftBank has completed a series A investment in CloudMinds and appointed CloudMinds CEO Bill Huang to the technical committee of its technology fund. CloudMinds, the world's first CI-based robot operator, is committed to the exploration of how to move from Artificial intelligence (AI) to CI.

Upgrading from AI to CI

The difference between AI and machine intelligence is that AI combines machines with human beings rather than treating them as wholly separate entities. AI-based robots, to some extent, have the ability to think and to reason logically, as well as to deliver stronger computing capability than the human brain. To cite an example, Google's computer program AlphaGo defeated its human opponent, South Korean Go champion Lee Sedo, last year. In addition to delivering superior computing capability in much the same way as AI-based robots do, CI-based robots have a rebuilt "cloud brain" which has the same neural network as human beings. Additionally, a CI-based robot can accomplish more complicated and precise tasks based on instructions as a result of the separation between the "cloud brain" and the machine itself.

A researcher from CloudMinds said, "Human beings have always been working on how to automate day-to-day activities. This is reflected by their efforts to replace stoneware with knife tools and the horse-drawn buggy with the automobile. The next goal for automation is the robot."

The greatest contribution by CloudMinds to innovation in robotics is enabling robot intelligence to be controlled by human beings. This needs HARI (a framework that combines human intelligence with AI) and a platform for controlling CI robots. The combination of the two platforms provides the most important distinction between CloudMinds and other robotics R&D firms.

With the development of cloud computing and 4G and 5G network technologies, it becomes viable to position the brain on the cloud and simulate the action of nerves transferring signals and data through networks. "The differences between mechanical intelligence, AI and CI reflect qualitative changes rather than quantitative changes, as do the differences between buggies, automobiles and the transmission of electronic information."

A pioneer's vision of the future

CloudMinds is a pioneer in the area of cloud intelligence for three reasons. Firstly, it is the first to propose the concept of "cloud intelligence", opening the door to the next step in artificial intelligence. Secondly, it has summarized the "cloud intelligence" concept as innovations in and integration of the cloud, networks and terminals. Thirdly, it has made many achievements in the application of cloud intelligence, including launching hardware such as the A1 and a guide helmet based on the cloud intelligent robot architecture.

CloudMinds' vision is to create an industry chain and ecosystem that consists of the cloud, networks and terminals, to promote worldwide adoption of its products and to provide enterprise services, in a safer and more efficient cloud intelligent robot era.

Code:
http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/chinese-smart-robot-maker-cloudminds-creates-ci-based-robots-by-upgrading-from-ai-to-ci-300407702.html
 
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China May Soon Surpass America on the Artificial Intelligence Battlefield

china_uav.jpg

unmanned aircraft could target high-value U.S. weapons platforms such as THAAD, Patriot PAC 3 and or any other forms of high value platforms beyond human reach, deep inside enemy territory very well protected, under extreme danger and attrition conditions.

Elsa Kania
February 21, 2017

The rapidity of recent Chinese advances in artificial intelligence indicates that the country is capable of keeping pace with, or perhaps even overtaking, the United States in this critical emerging technology. The successes of major Chinese technology companies, notably Baidu Inc., Alibaba Group and Tencent Holding Ltd.—and even a number of start-ups—have demonstrated the dynamism of these private-sector efforts in artificial intelligence. From speech recognition to self-driving cars, Chinese research is cutting edge. Although the military dimension of China’s progress in artificial intelligence has remained relatively opaque, there is also relevant research occurring in the People’s Liberation Army research institutes and the Chinese defense industry. Evidently, the PLA recognizes the disruptive potential of the varied military applications of artificial intelligence, from unmanned weapons systems to command and control. Looking forward,the PLA anticipates that the advent of artificial intelligence will fundamentally change the character of warfare,ultimately resulting in a transformation from today’s “informationized” (信息化) ways of warfare to future “intelligentized” (智能化) warfare.

The Chinese leadership has prioritized artificial intelligence at the highest levels, recognizing its expansive applications and strategic implications. The initial foundation for China’s progress in artificial intelligence was established through long-term research funded by national science and technology plans, such as the 863 Program. Notably, China’s 13th Five-Year Plan (2016–20) called for breakthroughs in artificial intelligence, which was also highlighted in the 13th Five-Year National Science and Technology Innovation Plan. The new initiatives focus on artificial intelligence and have been characterized as the “China Brain Plan” (中国脑计划), which seeks to enhance understandings of human and artificial intelligence alike. In addition, the Internet Plus and Artificial Intelligence, a three-year implementation plan for artificial intelligence (2016–18), emphasizes the development of artificial intelligence and its expansive applications, including in unmanned systems, in cyber security and for social governance. Beyond these current initiatives, the Chinese Academy of Engineering has proposed an “Artificial Intelligence 2.0 Plan,” and the Ministry of Science and Technology of the People’s Republic of China has reportedly tasked a team of experts to draft a plan for the development of artificial intelligence through 2030. The apparent intensity of this support and funding will likely enable continued, rapid advances in artificial intelligence with dual-use applications.

China’s significant progress in artificial intelligence must be contextualized by the national strategy of civil-military integration or “military-civil fusion” (军民融合) that has become a high-level priority under President Xi Jinping’s leadership. Consequently, it is not unlikely that nominally civilian technological capabilities will eventually be utilized in a military context. For instance, An Weiping (安卫平), deputy chief of staff of the PLA’s Northern Theater Command, has highlighted the importance of deepening civil-military integration, especially for such “strategic frontier technologies” as artificial intelligence. Given this strategic approach, the boundaries between civilian and military research and development tend to blur. In a notable case, Li Deyi (李德毅) acts as the director of the Chinese Association for Artificial Intelligence, and he is affiliated with Tsinghua University and the Chinese Academy of Engineering. Concurrently, Li Deyi is a major general in the PLA who serves as deputy director of the Sixty-First Research Institute, under the aegis of the Central Military Commission (CMC) Equipment Development Department.

How might China’s progress in artificial intelligence translate into capabilities for the PLA? At the CMC level, the PLA has seemingly established an Intelligent Unmanned Systems and Systems of Systems Science and Technology Domain Expert Group (军委智能无人系统及体系科学技术领域专家组), which may reflect a redoubled focus on intelligent systems. To date, the PLA has started to experiment with intelligent unmanned systems and evaluate their utility in peacetime and wartime contingencies. For instance, multiple versions of an intelligent unmanned boat, the Jinghai(精海), which has the capability to navigate autonomously and intelligently avoid obstacles, have been tested. Reportedly, the Jinghai was evaluated by the PLA’s former General Armaments Department and the PLA Navy’s Equipment Department, perhaps an indication of the navy’s intentions to acquire such a system, which could be utilized for sensing and reconnaissance missions and to reinforce its presence in disputed waters. Recently, there also appear to have been significant breakthroughs in UAV swarming. At the 2016 Zhuhai Airshow, the China Electronics Technology Group Corporation (CETC), a prominent state-owned defense industry conglomerate, in partnership with Tsinghua University, demonstrated its progress in swarm intelligence (集群智能) with a formation of nearly seventy UAVs that operated autonomously. Future UAV swarms could serve as an asymmetric means through which to target high-value U.S. weapons platforms, including aircraft carriers. Although recent claims of progress in the incorporation of artificial intelligence into cruise missiles cannot be verified, the Chinese defense industry may have achieved at least initial progress in the “intelligentization” of missiles and evidently aspires to enhance these capabilities in the future.

Looking forward, the PLA recognizes that the realization of the myriad military applications of artificial intelligence could revolutionize warfare. Given technological trends—and especially since the third offset strategy and the success of Google’s AlphaGo—PLA strategists have predicted the advent of the “military revolution of intelligentization.” Thus far, the PLA’s initial approach to artificial intelligence has been informed by its careful examination of U.S. military initiatives, but that approach may gradually diverge as a function of the PLA’s distinctive strategic culture. Based on recent writings, PLA officers and academics recognize that artificial intelligence will cause disruptive changes to the dynamics of military operations, from intelligent weapons systems to the intelligentization of C4ISR capabilities. Notably, the CMC’s Joint Staff Department has called for the PLA to take advantage of artificial intelligence and related technologies to progress towards intelligentized command and decision making in its construction of a joint operations command system. Already, an experimental project to integrate artificial intelligence into the PLA’s command and control systems has achieved initial success.

Ultimately, China’s advances in artificial intelligence could have immense strategic implications for the United States. Initially, the U.S. military possessed an undisputed advantage in the technologies associated with the second offset strategy. However, the uncertain trajectory of current U.S. defense innovation initiatives will be inherently complicated by the reality that today’s technological trends, especially in artificial intelligence, are not conducive to the preservation of such a decisive edge. The rapidity of technological diffusion has increased dramatically, and it is difficult to control, since cutting-edge research with dual-use applications increasingly occurs within the private sector. At this point, the future prospects for the PLA’s progress in intelligentization remain uncertain. Nonetheless, China evidently possesses the potential to compete with—or even leapfrog—the United States in artificial intelligence, among other critical emerging technologies. China’s rise as a major power in artificial intelligence could thus become a critical force multiplier for the PLA’s future capabilities.

Source:
http://nationalinterest.org/feature/china-may-soon-surpass-america-the-artificial-intelligence-19524
 
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Not good luck my friend, it's all "elbow grease".

Hard work and focus will get you there.

Daydreaming and boasting will get you nowhere.

Nothing happens by chance and money don't grow on trees.

You have to make it happen.
 
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Baidu's Deep Voice can quickly synthesize realistic human speech

The text-to-speech system can also change the emotions the words convey.

Baidu has been quietly working on other projects besides self-driving cars at its AI center in Silicon Valley, and now it has revealed one of them to MIT's Technology Review. Apparently, the Chinese tech titan has created a text-to-speech system called Deep Voice that's faster and more efficient than Google's WaveNet. The company says Deep Voice can be trained to speak in just a few hours with little to no human interaction. And since Baidu can control how it speaks to convey different emotions, it can (quickly) synthesize speech that sounds pretty natural and realistic.

Google's WaveNet can also synthesize realistic human speech, but it's quite computationally demanding and hard to use for real-world applications at this point. Baidu says it solved WaveNet's problem by using deep-learning techniques to convert text to phenomes, the smallest unit of speech. It then turns those phonemes into sounds using its speech synthesis network. The system converts the word "hello," for instance, into "(silence HH), (HH, EH), (EH, L), (L, OW), (OW, silence)" before the speech network pronounces it.

Both steps rely on deep learning and don't need human input. However, the system doesn't control which phonemes or syllables are stressed and how long they're pronounced. That's where Baidu steps in -- it switches them around to change the emotions it wants to convey.

While the company says Deep Voice has solved WaveNet's problem, it still requires a ton of computing power. A computer has to generate words to say in 20 microseconds to mimic human-like interaction. Baidu's researchers explain:

"To perform inference at real-time, we must take great care to never recompute any results, store the entire model in the processor cache (as opposed to main memory), and optimally utilize the available computational units."

Still, the researchers believe real-time speech synthesis is possible. They've already created quickly generated samples and collected feedback through Amazon's Mechanical Turk. They asked a large number of people through the service to rate the quality of their samples, and the results indicate that they're of excellent quality.

https://www.engadget.com/2017/03/09/baidu-deep-voice-natural-sounding-speec/
https://www.technologyreview.com/s/...lligence-lab-unveils-synthetic-speech-system/




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5 must-know Chinese computer vision startups
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Vision plays a central role in human cognition. While we use eyes to see things and the brain to interpret and coordinate, it is difficult for computers or robots to duplicate the way human perceive and visually sense the world around them.

Computer vision is the science that aims to give a similar capability to a machine. As the supporting technologies surround this multi-disciplinary field moves forward, computer vision is making great leaps to transform a variety of industries from face recognition and healthcare to security, agriculture, and more.

The rising market has give rise to a gold rush of startups all trying to capitalize on the trend. Here’s some of the most prominent players coming from China.

Megvii

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Formed in 2012 by Tsinghua University alumni, Megvii is a Beijing-based startup focused on computer vision and artificial intelligence. Its core product Face++ is a cloud-based face recognition technology platform that helps developers and companies to embed advanced face detection, analysis and recognition, and large-scale search techs in their apps and websites. It provides face-related API and offline software development kits as well as customized cloud services to both developers and enterprises.

As one of the earliest entrants to the sector, the company’s face recognition has been widely applied in various industries. Through a partnership with Ant Financial, Face++ has been integrated into Alipay to support facial scan logging in and Smile to Pay, a payment method that allows users to make purchase by scanning their faces. Its Face++ API has been used by over 50,000 developers include Alipay, Meitu, Lenovo, Didi and Jiayuan.

The company reportedly finished a US$ 100 million fundraising in December last year from investors includin CCB International Holdings and Foxconn.

DeepGlint

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DeepGlint is a computer vision startup providing 3D image analysis and deep learning technologies. With the goal of creating a search engine for the physical world, DeepGlint helps computers capture what is happening in real time, and understand the physical world like humans do. Its clients include banks, government, museums,

As one of the leading players in China’s computer vision sector, the company has recorded a major management reshuffle recently. Co-founder and CEO He Bofei resigned in January this year. Zhao Yong, former CTO of the company, is reported to be named as CEO.

SenseTime

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Company CEO Xu Li

Founded in 2014, SenseTime focuses on face recognition technology that can be applied to payment and picture analysis, for bank card verification and security systems. In addition, SenseTime is also developing security technology focused on text and characters, body shapes and vehicles.

Its customers include companies like China Mobile, HNA Group, Huawei, Xiaomi, Sina and JD.com

Yitu Technology

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Yitu Technology operates a cloud-based visual recognition engine that enables computers to detect and recognize faces and cars. The system was first applied to security surveillance to help authorities identify persons of interest in criminal investigations and to track traffic violations.

With surveillance and crowd-tracking as the primary focus, the company’s clients include some state authorities like China Customs, China Immigration Inspection as well as cooperate clients like Wanda Group, Huawei and AliCloud.

Leo Zhu, who gained a post-doctoral fellowship on computer vision at MIT, founded the company with high school friend Chenxi Lin, a former cloud computing technology director at Alibaba.

TuPu

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TuPu is a computer vision and artificial intelligence algorithms technology provider that primarily helps domestic enterprises to customize the image recognition, autonomous driving, advanced driver assistance system and driver monitoring system technologies using computer vision and deep learning algorithms.

The company primarily collaborates with auto transportation operators customizing camera and LiDAR-based low-cost autonomous driving algorithms and solutions.
 
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Tencent's Fine Art wins Computer Go UEC Cup

Mar 20, 2017

Sheila Yu

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Tencent’s artificial intelligence (AI) Fine Art (绝艺 in Chinese) stole the limelight after its stunning 11-game winning streak, at the 10th Computer Go UEC Cup, which ended on March 19 in Tokyo, local media is reporting (in Chinese).

Fine Art is an AI system designed by a team of 13 researchers at Tencent’s AI Lab, which was established less than one year ago. Its research focuses on machine learning, natural language processing, speech recognition and computer vision.

The news has caused another stir in the internet industry, following Google AlphaGo’s overwhelming victory last year, which has achieved a feat of 60 wins and 0 losses as of Jan. 5, 2017.

Unlike ordinary Go matches with all human contestants beings, the Computer Go UEC Cup held at the University of Electro-Communications (UEC) in Japan every year only has artificial intelligence competitors. The runner-up went to Japan’s DeepZenGo this year.

The Go tournament invited Google’s AlphaGo, but was declined.

According to Tencent, Fine Art adopts an algorithm similar to that of AlphaGo, mainly including human match database and the machine’s own match processing. In addition, the algorithm is based on strategic and value networks.

Not to be outdone, China’s two other internet giants Alibaba and Baidu have been ramping up efforts on AI research as well. Alibaba has launched AI programs such as the city brain project and ET Robot project.

Baidu has spent more than RMB 10 billion on its three AI research labs in recent years, and the recent public appearance of its AI “Baidu Brain” on a popular mental athletics show has won wide acclaim for its excellent face, voice, and fuzzy recognition.

When asked whether Fine Art has plans to play a match with AlphaGo in the future, the research team said they have no plans currently.

http://technode.com/2017/03/20/tencents-fine-art-wins-computer-go-uec-cup/
 
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腾讯围棋AI“绝艺”11连胜夺冠UEC杯 将公开技术细节

来源:博客园

时间:2017/3/19 19:01:13

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腾讯科技讯,第 10 届 UEC 杯计算机围棋大赛 3 月 19 日在东京落幕,腾讯 AI Lab(腾讯人工智能实验室)研发的围棋人工智能程序“绝艺”(Fine Art)首次参加比赛便一路过关斩将,继 18 日的积分赛七连胜进入 16 强后,今天决赛又四连胜战绩夺得本届 UEC 杯冠军,日本“DeepZenGo”获亚军。3 月 26 日,“绝艺”还将在东京与日本先锋棋手一力辽在“电圣战”中进行人机对弈。

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绝艺决胜局

UEC 杯 2007 年始于日本,是最具传统和权威的计算机围棋大赛,每年邀请各国高水平 AI 齐聚东京比赛,促进相关学术及科技的交流。日本的 DeepZenGo、法国的“疯石”(Crazy Stone)、美国 Facebook 公司的“黑暗森林”(Dark Forest)等世界著名计算机围棋程序先后在 UEC 杯折桂获奖,今年共有 30 支软件参赛。本次大赛还请到曾获日本围棋四大家之首“本因坊”头衔的王铭琬九段进行现场解说,也体现了日本棋院方面对于此次赛事的重视。

“很高兴‘绝艺’能够在 UEC 杯夺冠,这是非常难得的宝贵经验。‘绝艺’不同于其他实验室 AI,它得益于世界超一流棋手的指导,通过不断与高手交流及学习,一步步成长起来。我们希望,通过‘绝艺’能够让更多人关注、喜爱进而传承围棋这一传统文化。”腾讯公司副总裁、腾讯 AI Lab 负责人姚星表示,“‘绝艺’在研究价值上也不止于围棋 AI 本身,我们在深度学习和强化学习上进行了非常有价值的探索与创新,之后将通过论文公开这些技术创新和数据库的细节,为推动围棋 AI 的技术进步出一份力。腾讯 AI Lab 的发展愿景是,让 AI 未来无处不在(Make AI Everywhere),因此我们将以开放合作的态度,与业界一起共同推进全球 AI 技术的发展。”

“绝艺”名字,源自唐代杜牧的送别诗“绝艺如君天下少,闲人似我世间无”。“绝艺”曾先后使用多个 ID,在腾讯围棋(野狐围棋)平台与业余和职业高手切磋,多次战胜中日韩三国一众顶尖棋手,成为腾讯围棋首个晋级“十段”的棋手。截至 3 月 9 日,“绝艺”对局数量达 534 盘,战绩是 406 胜 128 负,胜率 76%,与柯洁、古力、常昊、范蕴若、范廷钰、朴廷桓等超过 100 位知名人类棋手有过交锋。

“绝艺”由腾讯 AI Lab 一个 13 人团队花了近一年时间自主研发,涵盖了人工智能最热门的研究领域——深度学习和强化学习。“绝艺”的学习主要包括人类棋谱数据库和机器自对弈,它的算法基于策略网络与价值网络两大核心,并创新性地大幅提升了价值网络的精度,使其大局观表现更好。通俗的说,“策略”指每一步博弈时,各种选择的取舍,选好棋弃差棋,这是偏微观评估;而“价值”则指能看懂棋局,判断给定棋局是不是能赢,这是偏宏观的评估。“‘绝艺’背后‘精准决策’的 AI 能力,应用前景非常广阔,如无人驾驶、量化金融、辅助医疗等。如果 AI 从围棋 AI 进化到不完美对称博弈系统,也就是能处理现实中更常见的不确定性问题时,想象空间非常巨大。”腾讯公司副总裁、AI Lab 负责人姚星表示。

腾讯 AI Lab 于 2016 年成立,专注于人工智能的基础研究及应用探索,不断提升 AI 的决策、理解及创造能力,同时为腾讯各产品业务提供 AI 技术支撑。腾讯 AI Lab 的基础研究包括计算机视觉、语音识别、自然语言处理和机器学习,其应用探索包括游戏 AI、内容 AI、社交 AI 及平台 AI,产品已应用在微信、QQ 及天天快报等上百个产品。目前实验室有超过 50 余位世界知名学院的 AI 科学家(90% 为博士)、及 200 多位经验丰富的工程师,力求做到“学术有影响,工业有产出”。
 
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Not to be outdone, China’s two other internet giants Alibaba and Baidu have been ramping up efforts on AI research as well. Alibaba has launched AI programs such as the city brain project and ET Robot project.

Baidu has spent more than RMB 10 billion on its three AI research labs in recent years, and the recent public appearance of its AI “Baidu Brain” on a popular mental athletics show has won wide acclaim for its excellent face, voice, and fuzzy recognition.

Good to have national champions.

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Incubator sharpens focus on innovation
By Chen Meiling | China Daily | Updated: 2017-03-20

Three Chinese incubators and two foreign companies agreed to establish an international business incubator in Beijing, as part of their effort to transform existing technologies and effect technology transfers.

Their new venture, Beijing International Co-Incubation, aims to provide monetary and technical support, as well as international market opportunities, for companies from Canada, South Korea and China.

It was jointly established by China International Economic Cooperation and Investment Inc, Beijing Zoom Technology Incubator Co Ltd, 898 InnoSpace, the Ontario Science Center and Zeta Plan Investment Co Ltd.

"Universities and research institutes generate innovation while the market brings entrepreneurship. Technology transfer is the integration of scientific achievements and entrepreneurial resources," said Chen Dongmin, former director of the Office of Science and Technology Development at Peking University. He was speaking at a seminar.

"Since innovative ideas can be introduced, there is no national boundary for this integration," Chen said. "Incubators play an important role in the process since they provide a space to reach consensus on the commercial environment, culture, protection of IP (intellectual property) and the enterprise's credit in different countries."

Beijing Zoom Technology Incubator Co Ltd, one of the founders of Beijing International Co-Incubation, introduced overseas technologies and applied them in different industries, which Chen believes is a good example for incubators to follow.

The company had three incubators in China, 10 overseas offices in Silicon Valley, Boston, Tel Aviv, and Berlin, and hardware accelerators to serve Sino-US and Sino-Italian technology transfers, according to Sang Chunhua, CEO of Zoom Technology Incubator.

"We need to find new growth points to pursue further development, while lack of innovation is one of the biggest challenges we may face in the next five years," Zhou Tianyong, an economics researcher at the Party School of the Communist Party of China Central Committee, said in his remarks while launching the book The Revolution of Growth.

The State Council released a plan to promote the commercialization of research findings in May 2016. According to the plan, it expects to build 100 national technology transfer institutes and 10 demonstration regions for the commercialization of research findings, and cultivate 10,000 professional intermediary agents for technology transfers.

Chris Cheung, director of the EUSME Center, said European small and medium-sized enterprises show great interest in China.

Cheung said: "A Chinese company invested 10 million euros ($10.63 million) to found a joint venture with a Slovenian company that focuses on technological innovation in electric automobile engines. A Spanish company asked about the price of technology transfer for its controlling software for wind power generation factories. And a Germany enterprise is looking for customers in Chinese coal and electricity plants to apply their emission reduction technology."
 
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Tencent’s artificial intelligence (AI) Fine Art (绝艺 in Chinese) stole the limelight after its stunning 11-game winning streak, at the 10th Computer Go UEC Cup, which ended on March 19 in Tokyo, local media is reporting (in Chinese).

Fine Art is an AI system designed by a team of 13 researchers at Tencent’s AI Lab, which was established less than one year ago. Its research focuses on machine learning, natural language processing, speech recognition and computer vision.

The news has caused another stir in the internet industry, following Google AlphaGo’s overwhelming victory last year, which has achieved a feat of 60 wins and 0 losses as of Jan. 5, 2017.

Unlike ordinary Go matches with all human contestants beings, the Computer Go UEC Cup held at the University of Electro-Communications (UEC) in Japan every year only has artificial intelligence competitors. The runner-up went to Japan’s DeepZenGo this year.

The Go tournament invited Google’s AlphaGo, but was declined.

According to Tencent, Fine Art adopts an algorithm similar to that of AlphaGo, mainly including human match database and the machine’s own match processing. In addition, the algorithm is based on strategic and value networks.

Not to be outdone, China’s two other internet giants Alibaba and Baidu have been ramping up efforts on AI research as well. Alibaba has launched AI programs such as the city brain project and ET Robot project.

Baidu has spent more than RMB 10 billion on its three AI research labs in recent years, and the recent public appearance of its AI “Baidu Brain” on a popular mental athletics show has won wide acclaim for its excellent face, voice, and fuzzy recognition.

When asked whether Fine Art has plans to play a match with AlphaGo in the future, the research team said they have no plans currently.
http://technode.com/2017/03/20/tencents-fine-art-wins-computer-go-uec-cup/
 
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Tencent’s artificial intelligence (AI) Fine Art (绝艺 in Chinese) stole the limelight after its stunning 11-game winning streak, at the 10th Computer Go UEC Cup, which ended on March 19 in Tokyo

Unlike ordinary Go matches with all human contestants beings, the Computer Go UEC Cup held at the University of Electro-Communications (UEC) in Japan every year only has artificial intelligence competitors. The runner-up went to Japan’s DeepZenGo this year.

The Go tournament invited Google’s AlphaGo, but was declined.

chinese software powah :D
 
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