China’s path to AI domination has a problem: brain drain

A new analysis shows that the number of Chinese AI researchers has increased tenfold over the last decade, but the majority of them live outside the country.

Superpower dreams: China has put forth a concerted effort to grow into a leading AI powerhouse over the last few years. Beijing deemed the discipline in need of special attention as early as 2012, and in 2017 it released a detailed national strategy for advancing and harnessing the technology. Read More

#china-ai

Assuring the Machine Learning Lifecycle: Desiderata, Methods, and Challenges

Machine learning has evolved into an enabling technology for a wide range of highly successful applications. The potential for this success to continue and accelerate has placed machine learning (ML) at the top of research, economic and political agendas. Such unprecedented interest is fueled by a vision of ML applicability extending to healthcare, transportation, defense and other domains of great societal importance. Achieving this vision requires the use of ML in safety-critical applications that demand levels of assurance beyond those needed for current ML applications. Our paper provides a comprehensive survey of the state-of-the-art in the assurance of ML, i.e. in the generation of evidence that ML is sufficiently safe for its intended use. The survey covers the methods capable of providing such evidence at different stages of the machine learning lifecycle, i.e. of the complex, iterative process that starts with the collection of the data used to train an ML component for a system, and ends with the deployment of that component within the system. The paper begins with a systematic presentation of the ML lifecycle and its stages. We then define assurance desiderata for each stage, review existing methods that contribute to achieving these desiderata, and identify open challenges that require further research. Read More

#accuracy, #assurance, #performance

Is the Threat of ‘Fake Science’ Real?

In the early 1980s, Soviet intelligence began Operation Infektion—a campaign to erode trust in the U.S. government by orchestrating a series of scientific papers and news articles arguing that the U.S. government created the HIV/AIDS virus. As part of the operation, Soviet intelligence services relied on retired biophysicists Lilli and Jakob Segal, who co-authored with university colleague a 47-page pamphlet attributing the origins of the disease to the U.S. government. The Segals’ report recounted numerous factually accurate aspects of the disease but veered away from reality by attributing the origins of HIV/AIDS to U.S. military experiments on prisoners at Fort Detrick, Maryland. Just two years after publication, the report had received coverage from news organizations in more than 80 countries and contributed to the persistent belief that the U.S. government manufactured HIV/AIDS. Read More

#fake

WT2 Instant Translation, does it work?

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#iot, #nlp, #translation

What is Amazon Go, where is it, and how does it work?

Amazon will be opening more Amazon Go stores in the US and UK during 2019 – the latest rumour is that Amazon has now settled on a London site.

Amazon Go gives you the option to buy your goods from Amazon in person rather than through Amazon.com.

However, unlike other physical shops, it doesn’t have any registers or checkouts. You simply walk in, pick out what you want and walk out. Amazon is calling this a “Just Walk Out” shopping experience. Read More

#artificial-intelligence, #big7, #iot