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China's Race for Artificial Intelligence (AI) Technology

Nearly Half of Global AI Funds Went to Chinese Firms Last Year

DOU SHICONG
DATE : APR 26 2019/SOURCE : YICAI

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Nearly Half of Global AI Funds Went to Chinese Firms Last Year

(Yicai Global) April 26 -- Funds secured by Chinese artificial intelligence companies made up almost one-half of the total worldwide last year.

Chinese AI firms raised a total of USD15.7 billion in funds, accounting for nearly 47 percent of the global tally, the latest report from Chinese think tank Wuzhen Institute shows. Each Chinese financing round yielded an average of over USD60 million.

Huge investments have given birth to a great number of AI companies. There were over 3,300 Chinese AI firms at the end of last year, accounting for more than 20 percent of all such companies in the world. About one-third of these Chinese firms came from the northern regions of Beijing, Hebei or northeastern Tianjin.

However, money streams are becoming more controlled as the number of early-stage financing rounds in the sector has declined for the first time this year. Investors are becoming increasingly mature as they pay more attention to core technologies as well as sustainable business models, the report added.

Chinese firms obtained nearly 68,500 AI-related patents from 2009 to 2018, ranking first in the world. The number is over double that of the US. The top locations for these Chinese firms were Beijing, Shenzhen, Shanghai, Nanjing and Chengdu.

https://www.yicaiglobal.com/news/chinese-ai-firms-got-nearly-one-half-of-global-ai-funds
 
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NEWS * 14 MAY 2019
Artificial intelligence is selecting grant reviewers in China | Nature
The country's major funding agency says the tool reduces the time it takes to find referees.

David Cyranoski

China’s largest funder of basic science is piloting an artificial intelligence tool that selects researchers to review grant applications, in an attempt to make the process more efficient, faster and fairer. Some researchers say the approach by the National Natural Science Foundation of China is world-leading, but others are sceptical about whether AI can improve the process.

Choosing researchers to peer review project proposals or publications is time-consuming and prone to bias. Several academic publishers are experimenting with artificial intelligence (AI) tools to select reviewers and carry out other tasks, and a few funding agencies, including some in North America and Europe, have trialled simple AI tools to identify potential reviewers. Some of these systems match keywords in grant applications to those in publications of other scientists.

The National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC) is building a more sophisticated system that will crawl online scientific-literature databases and scientists’ personal web pages, using natural-language processing to glean detailed information about the publications or research projects of potential referees. The system will use semantic analysis of the text to compare the grant application with this information and identify the best matches, says agency head Li Jinghai, who is based in Beijing.

Time saver
An early version of the tool selected at least one member of each of nearly 44,000 panels that approved projects last year, says Yang Wei, the agency’s former head, who presented data on the pilot at a meeting on scholarly communication in Hangzhou last month. Panels are composed of between three and seven people. The system is already cutting the time administrative staff have to spend looking for referees, says Yang. A similar approach will be used this year to select reviewers, he says.

The NSFC has become a world leader in reforming grant-review processes, says Patrick Nédellec, director of the international-cooperation department of the French CNRS, Europe’s largest basic-research agency. The NSFC is being forced to innovate as the number of grant applications keeps growing, says Nédellec, who attended a meeting last September at which Li discussed the agency’s reform plans. “Because the pressure is so high, China has no choice but to find the best way,” he says.

In the past five years, the number of applications the NSFC receives has increased by roughly 10% a year. In 2018, the organization evaluated 225,000 grant applications — almost 6 times the number received by the US National Science Foundation. The NSFC is struggling to process applications and find appropriate reviewers, says Li. “The challenge is not having enough people,” he says. “AI will solve that.”

Reducing bias
Li also wants the tool to reduce bias in reviewer selection. In China, scientists try to lobby for their projects, he says. “A problem with evaluations is that people use connections. AI can’t be corrupted,” says Li.

This is also an issue in countries where applicants are asked to suggest experts who could review their proposals. For instance, the Swiss National Science Foundation has found that reviewers who were recommended by the applicants were much more likely to endorse a project than were referees chosen by the foundation.

The NSFC’s pilot AI system works only on websites written in Chinese characters, but Li wants it to be able to crawl English-language websites in the future.

“NSFC’s reform plan is ambitious, forward-looking and comprehensive,” says Manfred Horvat, a science-policy adviser at the Vienna University of Technology, who also heard Li’s talk last September.

Other countries are following China’s lead. Last month, the Research Council of Norway started using natural-language processing to cluster about 3,000 research proposals into groups and match them to the best reviewer panels, says Thomas Hansteen, an adviser to the council.

Hints of scepticism
But not everyone is convinced that AI should be used in the review process. Susan Guthrie, a science-policy specialist at research organization RAND Europe in Cambridge, UK, notes that the Canadian Institutes of Health Research ran into significant challenges with an algorithm used for reviewer selection.

The Canadian agency hired RAND Europe in 2016 to carry out a meta-analysis of studies on grant peer review. Based partly on that report, the agency concluded that the algorithm sometimes selected reviewers who had conflicts of interest or were otherwise not appropriate or qualified to evaluate the proposal. “While algorithm-based matching sounded attractive, there is a limit at this stage of artificial intelligence to what it can possibly achieve,” the independent expert panel concluded. “Reviewer selection must be primarily informed by scientific human judgement.”

Elizabeth Pier, a policy researcher at Education Analytics in Madison, Wisconsin, thinks AI will not remove selection bias. She fears that AI systems end up replicating the biases ingrained in human judgements, rather than avoiding them. She recommends that the NSFC should do a study comparing the reviewers selected by AI with those chosen by people. Li says the NSFC might consider this once the system is up and running.

Credit for reviewers
Li plans to introduce other tools to make the grant system fairer over the next five years. These include a credit system that will reward researchers for good, fair and timely reviews — although Li would not comment on the nature of the rewards.

The idea of the credit system is to encourage reviewers to take the job seriously and be professional, he says.

Statistician John Ioannidis of Stanford University in California applauds the NSFC’s efforts to use objective, data-driven tools in mapping proposals to select reviewers. But he thinks it will be difficult to evaluate whether reviewers have made good decisions and deserve credit. It can take decades for an idea to be considered “great or a waste”, says Ioannidis.

Li is ready to take on the challenges. “This task is not easy to accomplish and will require constant improvement in a long process of study and tests,” he says.
 
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Shanghai releases sponsorship plan for AI projects

Source:Global Times Published: 2019/5/14


Shanghai released a guideline on Monday to provide financial support for artificial intelligence (AI) projects, showing its ambition to build up an AI pilot zone for the nation amid the worldwide AI race.

An industry insider said the plan will strongly increase the city's attraction for ventures in the sector.

The involved projects include both basic theoretical research and related applications of AI core technology, and the application part will mainly focus on transportation, medical treatment and community management, according to the guideline.

The specific details of sponsorships for qualified entities were not given.

"The application of AI technology is always a critical step, which needs firm support from government resources, such as medical treatment and transportation," a senior AI engineer, who preferred anonymity, told the Global Times on Tuesday.

Amid the escalating trade friction and technology competition between China and the US, "it also sends a signal to capital investment companies from around the world," he added.

According to a trend report on AI 2019 by the World Intellectual Property Organization in January, China has played a vital role in the field and is mainly competing with the US and Japan.

"Chinese organizations make up 17 of the top 20 academic players in AI patenting as well as 10 of the top 20 in AI-related scientific publications," said the report.

Theses written in China in the field of AI increased from 4.26 percent in 1997 to 27.68 percent in 2017 of the world's total amount, and the number of highly cited papers overtook the US to become the world's leader in 2013, a study by Tsinghua University showed in 2018.

In addition, China had 1,011 AI enterprises, taking it to second place in the world as of June 2018, and it had attracted the largest amount of capital from 2013 to the first quarter of 2018, the study said.

Google Inc set up an AI research center in China in 2017, which showed China's potential development in the field.

Shanghai has been taking steps to pursue AI leadership in the past few years. At the World Artificial Intelligence Conference last year, Shanghai introduced 22 detailed plans focusing on talent cultivation, data resources and technological innovation, reported CCTV in September 2018.

As one of the core technologies of the Fourth Industrial Revolution, AI technology could be a critical strength for China's industrial upgrading, which needs comprehensive support, the engineer said.

http://www.globaltimes.cn/content/1149894.shtml
 
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Microsoft opens largest AI & IoT lab in Shanghai

2019-05-17 09:08:19 Xinhua Editor : Gu Liping

Microsoft Corporation has established an Artificial Intelligence and Internet of Things Insider Lab in Shanghai to aid digital transformation across industries.

Located in a 2,800-square-meter building in the Zhangjiang Hi-Tech Park of the Pudong New Area, the lab, which began operation Wednesday, is established in partnership with the state-run Zhangjiang Group. It is the fourth and also the largest such lab run by Microsoft around the world.

Microsoft said the lab provides "all-around support" for enterprises inside and taps into the Internet of Things and AI technologies to fuel the digital transformation taking place across industries, including manufacturing, retail, healthcare, finance and urban construction.

Thirty Chinese and foreign businesses have been selected out of some 300 applicants as the first batch of "enterprises of empowerment" in the lab. They include both start-ups, among which 21 are based in Shanghai, and multinational corporations, such as ABB Engineering (Shanghai) Ltd. and Pan Asia Technical Automotive Center Co., Ltd.

The lab will provide support for the enterprises in the next three to six months, offering hardware and software resources, cloud service and access to the Microsoft ecosystem, according to Microsoft.

"The combination and application of AI and Internet of Things technologies are becoming the latest trends leading global digital transformation," Alain Crozier, Microsoft corporate vice president, chairman and CEO of Greater China Region, said at a launch ceremony held Wednesday.

"A survey indicates that global Internet of Things business will exceed 255 billion U.S. dollars in 2022, and China will occupy nearly a quarter of it, which means a market with huge potentials," he said, adding that the lab aims to help enterprises "win market opportunities brought by the technology innovations."

The three other Microsoft AI & IoT Insider Labs are located in Redmond of Washington, Shenzhen of China and Munich of Germany.

http://www.ecns.cn/news/sci-tech/2019-05-17/detail-ifzikase6324431.shtml
 
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China's AI industry poised to enter boom times

Source:Global Times Published: 2019/5/19

China's artificial intelligence (AI) industry made rapid strides during the past year, and it is about to enter a period of development and facilitate the transformation and upgrading of China's economy, according to a report by the Chinese Institute of New Generation Artificial Intelligence Development Strategies.

The Chinese government attaches great importance to the development of AI. The Ministry of Industry and information Technology in 2017 issued a three-year action plan for promoting the development of the AI industry. The plan said that by 2020, major breakthroughs would be made in AI technologies.

Local Chinese governments have increased financial and educational investment in the AI industry.

Beijing raised $2.1 billion in 2018 to build a science and technology park centered on AI research and development (R&D). The park is scheduled to be completed in five years and will house more than 400 ventures.

In 2018, China ranked first in the world for financing in the AI industry, with 577 out of the 745 AI enterprises having raised 383 billion yuan ($ 55.4 billion), doubling the previous year's investment, according to the report.

Most of the important financing events in 2018 occurred to AI unicorn companies.

For example, SenseTime raised $1.62 billion and is valued at $6 billion, making it the AI unicorn company with the highest valuation. Megvii Technology, also a unicorn, raised $600 million in 2018 and set a new financing record in the facial recognition sector.

The development of the AI sector has also received support from Chinese schools. As of February 28, 2019, China had 94 AI universities and 75 non-university scientific research institutions engaged in AI basic research, technology development and talent cultivation.

China has the biggest database in the world. Big data is widely applied in many fields in China, including finance, medical treatment, telecoms and transportation.

"China's AI enterprises are positioned intensively at the application and technology layer," Liu Gang, director of the Nankai Institute of Economics, told the Global Times on Sunday. Liu is also the chief economist at the Chinese Institute of New Generation Artificial Intelligence Development Strategies.

AI technology is being gradually applied in daily life in China in the sectors of big data, cloud computing, facial recognition and others.

Facial recognition is being used in banks, transport and other self-service situations. Passengers in Jinan, capital of East China's Shandong Province, can use facial recognition to unlock entry gates. The technology can also be used to open self-service parcel pickup machines.
 
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Shanghai launches nation's 2nd pilot zone for AI

Source:Xinhua Published: 2019/5/26

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Photo: Xinhua


Shanghai officially launched efforts to build a pilot zone for the new-generation innovation and development of artificial intelligence (AI) Saturday, the second in China after Beijing.

The Ministry of Industry and Information Technology and the Shanghai Municipal Government jointly made the announcement on Saturday.

The pilot zone in Shanghai will focus on AI in medical care and health, smart transportation and smart communities, said Gan Pin, deputy director of the Shanghai Science and Technology Commission.

"As we apply AI in the three fields, the result will be tremendous changes to people's lives, which will help us contribute to the nationwide development of AI," Gan said.

In building the pilot zone, Shanghai will raise the level of originality, develop industrial use, build an environment for innovation, and establish legal, regulatory and ethical standards for AI, he said.

Shanghai has vigorously promoted the development of the AI industry with its AI@SH action in recent years, attracting industrial leaders like Microsoft and IBM.

The city is eyeing a global AI hub with plans to expand the scale of its industry to more than 100 billion yuan (14.5 billion U.S. dollars) by 2020.

By 2023, the pilot zone aims to become a leader in the theory, technology, application, talent and governance of AI, according to the target.

Another pilot project was launched in Beijing in February.
 
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AI in China | Nature > Spotlight

Articles
  • Nature | Spotlight


    Despite obstacles, such as an ongoing trade war between China and the United States, artificial-intelligence researchers are working to ensure they can collaborate internationally.
  • Sarah O’Meara

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  • Southeast University’s work on human-robot interaction systems has potential for use in manufacturing, surgery, and rehabilitation, as well as in exploration of extreme environments.
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    Using AI-assisted diagnostic technologists, a high-tech biomedical company in Wuhan is extending cervical screening services to local communities.
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    Computer scientists at Wuhan University are making breakthroughs in AI theories and methods, leading to innovations in healthcare, unmanned systems, and more.
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    Shanghai Research Institute for Intelligent Autonomous Systems leverages Tongji University’s strengths in autonomous systems and aims to stand at the forefront of artificial intelligence innovations.
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    A university-industry-government partnership is seeking to recruit talented researchers to advance AI research and meet industrial needs.
 
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Beijing district to promote AI classes in elementary schools

2019-05-30 19:38:37 Xinhua Editor : Mo Hong'e

A district in Beijing Municipality is promoting pilot projects for opening artificial intelligence (AI) courses in elementary schools, according to the local education department.

Dongcheng District, which lies at the heart of the capital, has picked six elementary schools for pilot AI classes this year, and will promote such classes in more schools starting September, according to the department.

The department has also compiled a textbook for teaching AI in elementary school, which introduces the technology in the form of games or daily practices.

Beijing is not the only Chinese city to offer pupils AI courses. Shanghai has launched such pilot programs among pupils and Shanghai-based East China Normal University Press has also issued a 10-volume textbook series on AI.

China's Ministry of Education issued a directive in March, asking for AI courses to be offered at primary and secondary schools, and efforts to popularize programming education in steps.

http://www.ecns.cn/news/2019-05-30/detail-ifziupva1113482.shtml
 
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China's national supercomputing center launches AI testbed
Source: Xinhua| 2019-06-01 14:44:51|Editor: mingmei

SHENZHEN, June 1 (Xinhua) -- China's National Supercomputing Center in the south China city of Shenzhen on Friday launched a testbed for artificial intelligence (AI) experiments.

The AI testbed, named Tai, provides the basic environment of AI chips and systems for the research, development and application tests of AI inventions.

Tai is capable of dealing with large-scale and complex scenarios. Scientists have built an EB-level intelligent data management and analysis system for high-energy physics, as well as simulation of AI scenarios in real business situations and an AI-powered weather forecast platform.

The testbed is co-built by organizations, enterprises and research institutes from home and abroad, including the Bench Council, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China Software Testing Center under the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, Alibaba and Cambricon.

It can simulate the verification environment for future smart devices, said Feng Shengzhong, head of the center.

As a part of the Bench Council's 2019 International Symposium on Intelligent Computers, an international AI competition started Friday in Shenzhen, which has made the new testbed the venue.

Feng said the center had taken charge of the operation and maintenance management together with the Beijing Academy of Frontier Sciences and Technology.
 
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AI offers breakthrough in cancer diagnosis
By Qiu Quanlin in Guangzhou | China Daily | Updated: 2019-06-13 09:10

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Doctors use AI-enabled equipment to conduct online medical examinations at the 3rd World Intelligence Congress, in Tianjin. [Photo by Jia Lei / For China Daily]

Huawei Cloud, a subsidiary of the Chinese technology giant Huawei Technologies, and Kingmed Diagnostics, a Guangzhou-based medical diagnostic testing company, have announced a technological breakthrough in the diagnosis of cervical cancer.

By leveraging AI technologies, they can diagnose the disease with a true positive rate of over 99.9 percent, and a true negative rate of more than 99 percent, which is currently the highest level in the world, according to Kingmed Diagnostics.

"It takes only 36 seconds to examine cervical smear cells, which would usually need an average six minutes by cytopathologists," said Luo Pifu, director of the Kingmed Diagnostics pathological department.

Cervical cancer remains one of the biggest threats to women, with about 100,000 new cases being reported each year in China, according to Luo.

"Early examination is key to treating cervical cancer," said Luo.

However, only 70 million women have been examined since China began a nationwide examination program against cervical and breast cancers in 2009, according to Liang Xiaoman, a Guangzhou-based cytologist.

Liang said China lags in the development of pathologists, especially in rural areas.

"The lack of enough pathologists has become a major factor affecting the nationwide examination of cervical cancer," said Liang.

The companies began collaborating in July, conducting research in the use of artificial technology in assisting examinations, and was based on 43.5 million cervical cell samples collected by Kingmed Diagnostics.

The breakthrough was also based on Huawei Cloud's Model-Arts, which provides data processing, intelligent labeling, a readily packaged development environment, automatic model generation and comprehensive AI development.

"The AI technology will help greatly increase efficiency of the diagnosis of cervical cancer, benefiting the country's 350 million women," said Liang.

According to Pan Jie, director of Huawei Cloud Guangdong business section, the AI technology may be expanded into areas of pathology such as breasts, digestion, kidneys and blood.

"We are exploring more uses of the cutting-edge AI technology in medical areas, aiming to provide more assistance to increase medical testing efficiency," said Pan.
 
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Chinese physicist says revolutionary technique means alloys can be developed in hours instead of years
  • Inspired by early colour television, method can create thousands of alloys quickly
  • Leader of Beijing team says a ‘revolution in material science’ is close to hand

Stephen Chen

Published: 7:10pm, 7 May, 2019

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Speedy development of alloys may accelerate programmes to explore the harsh environments of space and ocean depths. Photo: Xinhua

Chinese physicists say they have developed a method that can cut the time involved in the discovery of alloys from years to hours.

The technique has led to the creation of high performance alloys, including the world's toughest amorphous metal, or metallic glass, for use in extremely hot environments.

The search for an alloy typically takes years, but now it can be done in less than two hours, the Chinese researchers said.

Part of their findings was published in the journal Nature this month.

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Inspired by the colour gun method used to create images for television sets, the Beijing team speeds up alloy discovery. Photo: Handout

In the conventional method, metals needed to be weighed, melted to an alloy and tested for performance. To find the right formula, researchers might need to test more than a thousand combinations and each test might take a day or two.

Professor Wang Weihua, researcher with the institute of physics at the Chinese Academy of Sciences in Beijing and lead scientist of the study, said his team’s research was inspired by early colour televisions, which used three electric devices known as guns that fired red, green and blue light onto the back of the screen to create real-world colours for the viewer.

Wang’s team’s alloy technology also involved three guns, but instead of electronic pulses they fired “bullets” made of different metals. These struck a silicon board simultaneously and fused to form alloys.

Sensors quickly measured the alloys’ properties and picked the most appropriate for the researchers.

This approach allowed scientists to create more than 1,000 samples, test their performance and select the most promising within a couple of hours.

“We proved it works,” Wang said. “It will increase people's confidence. There will be a revolution in material science.”

The alloy reported in the Nature paper contained iridium, nickel and tantalum. It had a distorted atomic structure similar to that of glass. Metallic glasses can be extremely strong but they usually weaken by temperatures of 400 degrees Celsius or more.

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The Beijing team hopes artificial intelligence, in tandem with its technique, will start a materials revolution. Photo: Handout

The new alloy can maintain a tensile strength nearly eight times that of steel at more than 700 degrees Celsius, researchers said.

It can also remain intact for months in aqua regia, the mixture of nitric acid and hydrochloric acid that can dissolve gold and platinum.

Such properties make the alloy an ideal candidate material for manufacturing critical components for use in harsh environments such as space, ocean depths and battlefields.

“We are introducing artificial intelligence into the design and search for new amorphous metals,” Wang said. “It can further increase the speed of discoveries. In the near future, we may even be able to create material on demand.

“The potential application is almost unlimited.”



Chinese physicist says revolutionary technique means alloys can be developed in hours instead of years | South China Morning Post

Ming-Xing Li, Shao-Fan Zhao, Zhen Lu, Akihiko Hirata, Ping Wen, Hai-Yang Bai, MingWei Chen, Jan Schroers, YanHui Liu, Wei-Hua Wang. High-temperature bulk metallic glasses developed by combinatorial methods. Nature (2019). DOI: 10.1038/s41586-019-1145-z
AI helps promote material science: Chinese experts
Source: Xinhua| 2019-06-18 21:05:24|Editor: zh

GUANGZHOU, June 18 (Xinhua) -- Artificial Intelligence (AI) could help promote the development of material science and accelerate the invention of new materials, according to Chinese experts.

Many key and core technologies that need breakthroughs in China are related to the material science, and AI could help in these areas, Zhao Zhongxian, an academician of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS), who won China's top science award, said at a science forum opened in Dongguan, Guangdong Province Monday.

Traditional methods for material composition analysis are time-consuming and expensive. It takes an average of 10 years for a laboratory to develop new materials and 20 years for mass production. With AI technology, the development and application cycle of new materials is expected to be shortened by more than half.

Wang Weihua from the Institute of Physics under CAS said AI is changing the way new materials are discovered. Through machine learning of material data, AI could outperform many material scientists and make a more efficient prediction of new materials.

The fast development of AI also needs support from the material science. With emerging intelligent robots, wearable medical devices and IoT systems, future smart sensors will require good sensitivity, flexibility and stability, which puts new demands on materials.

AI and material science are closely related, and material research could offer a solution for AI-related sensitive components, Zhao said.
 
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Shanghai hospital's AI pediatricians to outperform junior doctors
Source: Xinhua| 2019-06-17 22:09:36|Editor: ZX

SHANGHAI, June 17 (Xinhua) -- Shanghai Children's Medical Center on Monday presented a pediatric diagnostic system using artificial intelligence (AI) technology that could give medical advice on more than 300 illnesses.

Trained on millions of previous cases to learn how to make diagnoses, the new AI "pediatricians," the first in Shanghai, are capable of clinical service guiding, carrying out pre-examination and intelligent diagnosis with an accuracy rate of more than 90 percent, the hospital said.

Patients could speak out or text their symptoms on the "smart guide" platform on their mobile phones before the "AI doctors" assist them in registering and recommending the right clinician.

The system can make detailed inquiries and recommended necessary examinations if the patients continue to choose the intelligent pre-diagnosing inspections.

Doctors in the background can provide real-time reviews and let the computer system automatically issue the examination lists after confirmation.

Using the AI system will save patients at least one hour compared with the traditional medical process under which they need to go through a series of procedures including registration, interviews, lab examinations and taking medicine.

"AI pediatricians are growing and evolving together with human clinicians," said Zhao Liebin, deputy head of the hospital. "With millions of more cases learned, they will outperform junior doctors sometime in the future."
 
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Beijing Internet court launches AI judge
Source: Xinhua| 2019-06-27 20:08:56|Editor: Liangyu

BEIJING, June 27 (Xinhua) -- The Beijing Internet court on Thursday launched an online litigation service center, which includes an AI judge claimed to be "the first of its kind in the world."

The AI judge, based on intelligent synthesizing technologies of speech and image, will help the court's judges complete repetitive basic work, including litigation reception, and thus enables professional practitioners to focus on judicial trials.

The judge has a female image with a voice, facial expressions and actions based on a real person. It can also provide users with litigation guidance in real time, helping users to use the online litigation platform.

The innovation is expected to improve the quality and efficiency of judicial work. As technology advances, the AI judge is more likely to act as assistants, able to conduct intelligent question-and-answer communications with users based on the data of professional knowledge and the guidance from real judges.
 
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Baidu Claims Its AI Has Reunited 6,700 Missing People With Their Families
ZHANG YUSHUO
DATE : JUL 16 2019/SOURCE : YICAI

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Baidu Claims Its AI Has Reunited 6,700 Missing People With Their Families

(Yicai Global) July 16 -- Baidu's artificial intelligence technology has helped reunite more than 6,700 missing people with their families over the past three years, according to its latest corporate social responsibility report.

Users can access a mini program in the Baidu app and upload a photo to compare with tens of thousands of missing people's photos on the Ministry of Civil Affairs' website, the firm said in the second-quarter report published yesterday. The system, which has received more than 200,000 photo uploads since 2016, cross-checks images to find similarities between the uploaded image and the ministry's gallery.

The Beijing-based tech giant has also helped improve the lives of the disabled and combat domestic violence, it claims, saying it has set up a research team to create an AI-powered program to translate fingerspelling for hearing-impaired children.

More benefits of its AI tech include cracking down on clinics illegally using the names of public hospitals to foster patient trust, creating content for its Wikipedia-like Baidu Baike medical encyclopedia, safeguarding children in schools, protecting endangered languages and digitizing massage shops, according to the report.

The firm also sought to help users quit smoking by using its own PaddlePaddle technology to better understand human behavior and guide smokers toward giving up the habit.

Baidu will continue to disclose how its technologies and partnerships with public organizations are helping society, it added.
 
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Hang-Shao-Tai Railway May Become China's First AI Railway
XU WEI
DATE : JUL 18 2019/SOURCE : YICAI

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Hang-Shao-Tai Railway May Become China's First AI Railway

(Yicai Global) July 18 -- Hang-Shao-Tai Railway, China's first high-speed rail transit project that is in part funded by private capital, may also become the country's first high-speed railway that uses artificial intelligence in its operation.

China Railway Gecent Technology, which runs a train wifi application, and Hangshaotai Railway, the project company, penned a cooperation agreement, The Paper reported. The route, slated for 2021, will connect the cities of Hangzhou, Shaoxing and Taizhou in eastern Zhejiang province.

AI may be applied to the construction and client services, CRGT's Chief Executive Pan Yunbin told The Paper. CRGT, a joint venture between China Railway Investment, Geely Holding Group and Tencent Holdings, offers rail transit passengers with wifi services, including those related to entertainment, food takeout, and e-commerce.

The project investment has risen to CNY14.8 billion (USD2.2 billion) as nearly all of the land has been secured while about one-third of the construction is done, according to the same report. Hangshaotai still needs to invest CNY13 billion this year. The firm started building the largest planned station of Taizhou in late June.

AI will be deployed at stations. New technologies can reduce labor costs so lighting among other equipment in the stations will be managed by robots, Pan said.

The Internet of Things and AI can improve passengers' travel experiences by diversifying and customizing them, said Wu Peirong, general manager of Hangshaotai, which was formed by China State Railway Group, Zhejiang's provincial government and a clutch of private firms led by conglomerate Fosun International.
 
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