Brief Review — Andrew Ng, AI Minimalist: The Machine-Learning Pioneer Says Small is the New Big

  • I’ve taken many his AI courses in deeplearning.ai and was a mentor in one of his courses in Coursera. His courses really strengthen me a lot about the deep learning knowledge.
  • This time, I would like to share an article that I’ve read recently, from IEEE Spectrum Magazine in April 2022, namely “Andrew Ng, AI Minimalist: The Machine-Learning Pioneer Says Small is the New Big”
  • IEEE Spectrum Magazine is a monthly magazine, which talks about technology of all kinds. It has impact factor of 3.578.
  • In this article, Andrew Ng has shared a lot of his valuable visions and broad views about AI, e.g.: NLP, CV, semiconductor manufacturers, and his company, even from his first NeurIPS workshop paper, to recent NeurIPS data centric AI workshop! Read More


  • #strategy

SCSP Interim Panel Report

The Intelligence Panel Interim Panel Report (IPR) is the second of six interim reports from the overall work that the Special Competitive Studies Project (SCSP) conducted over the past year and that was summarized in our Mid-Decade Challenges to National Competitiveness report published on September 12, 2022. This report benefited greatly from insights and expertise by a number of individuals to whom we are deeply grateful. It aims to reflect many, though not all, of those insights. It was prepared by the SCSP staff and, as such, it is not a consensus document of all the experts who assisted. Read More

#china-vs-us

AI is changing scientists’ understanding of language learning – and raising questions about an innate grammar

Unlike the carefully scripted dialogue found in most books and movies, the language of everyday interaction tends to be messy and incomplete, full of false starts, interruptions and people talking over each other. From casual conversations between friends, to bickering between siblings, to formal discussions in a boardroom, authentic conversation is chaotic. It seems miraculous that anyone can learn language at all given the haphazard nature of the linguistic experience.

For this reason, many language scientists – including Noam Chomsky, a founder of modern linguistics – believe that language learners require a kind of glue to rein in the unruly nature of everyday language. And that glue is grammar: a system of rules for generating grammatical sentences.

…But new insights into language learning are coming from an unlikely source: artificial intelligence. A new breed of large AI language models can write newspaper articlespoetry and computer code and answer questions truthfully after being exposed to vast amounts of language input. And even more astonishingly, they all do it without the help of grammar. Read More

#nlp

Generally Intelligent secures cash from OpenAI vets to build capable AI systems

A new AI research company is launching out of stealth today with an ambitious goal: to research the fundamentals of human intelligence that machines currently lack. Called Generally Intelligent, it plans to do this by turning these fundamentals into an array of tasks to be solved and by designing and testing different systems’ ability to learn to solve them in highly complex 3D worlds built by their team.

“We believe that generally intelligent computers will someday unlock extraordinary potential for human creativity and insight,” CEO Kanjun Qiu told TechCrunch in an email interview. “However, today’s AI models are missing several key elements of human intelligence, which inhibits the development of general-purpose AI systems that can be deployed safely … Generally Intelligent’s work aims to understand the fundamentals of human intelligence in order to engineer safe AI systems that can learn and understand the way humans do.” Read More

#human

Is This The Death of VFX?

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#vfx, #videos

No Language Left Behind: Scaling Human-Centered Machine Translation

Driven by the goal of eradicating language barriers on a global scale, machine translation has solidified itself as a key focus of artificial intelligence research today. However, such efforts have coalesced around a small subset of languages, leaving behind the vast majority of mostly low-resource languages. What does it take to break the 200 language barrier while ensuring safe, high quality results, all while keeping ethical considerations in mind? In No Language Left Behind, we took on this challenge by first contextualizing the need for low-resource language translation support through exploratory interviews with native speakers. Then, we created datasets and models aimed at narrowing the performance gap between low and high-resource languages. More specifically, we developed a conditional compute model based on Sparsely Gated Mixture of Experts that is trained on data obtained with novel and effective data mining techniques tailored for low-resource languages. We propose multiple architectural and training improvements to counteract overfitting while training on thousands of tasks. Critically, we evaluated the performance of over 40,000 different translation directions using a human-translated benchmark, Flores-200, and combined human evaluation with a novel toxicity benchmark covering all languages in Flores-200 to assess translation safety. Our model achieves an improvement of 44% BLEU relative to the previous state-of-the-art, laying important groundwork towards realizing a universal translation system. Finally, we open source all contributions described in this work, accessible at https://github.com/facebookresearch/fairseq/tree/nllb. Read More

#nlp

Adobe’s latest AI prototype gives even the worst dancers some impressive moves

Project Motion Mix converts a still photograph into a dancing animation using machine learning

Adobe will reveal a prototype AI project later today at Adobe Max 2022 that can convert a still image of a person into an animated dancer. Adobe says that all you need to do is load a full-body picture into Project Motion Mix, and the system will turn that individual into an AI-controlled puppet, animating new dance moves.

The system uses a combination of AI-based motion generation and what Adobe is calling “human rendering technologies” to create its animations. The software lets users select from different dance styles, tweak the background, and add multiple dancers into one frame. However, it’s still just a prototype, and Adobe says it isn’t sure if or when the system might be added to its user-facing services. Read More

#image-recognition

Meta touts AI that translates spoken-only language

Meta on Wednesday said that it built an artificial intelligence system that translates Hokkien into English even though the Taiwanese language lacks a standard written form.

The Silicon Valley tech titan that owns Facebook and Instagram billed the work at its Universal Speech Translator project as an effort to enable users from around the world to socialize regardless of the languages they speak.

…The fledgling system for translating Hokkien was billed by Meta as the first artificial intelligence-powered “speech-to-speech translation system developed for an unwritten language.” Read More

#nlp

NVIDIA, Oracle CEOs in Fireside Chat Light Pathways to Enterprise AI

Speeding adoption of enterprise AI and accelerated computing, Oracle CEO Safra Catz and NVIDIA founder and CEO Jensen Huang discussed their companies’ expanding collaboration in a fireside chat live streamed today from Oracle CloudWorld in Las Vegas.

Oracle and NVIDIA announced plans to bring NVIDIA’s full accelerated computing stack to Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (OCI). It includes NVIDIA AI Enterprise, NVIDIA RAPIDS for Apache Spark and NVIDIA Clara for healthcare.

In addition, OCI will deploy tens of thousands more NVIDIA GPUs to its cloud service, including A100 and upcoming H100 accelerators. Read More

#nvidia

GitHub Users Want to Sue Microsoft For Training an AI Tool With Their Code

“Copilot” was trained using billions of lines of open-source code hosted on sites like Github. The people who wrote the code are not happy.

Open-source coders are investigating a potential class-action lawsuit against Microsoft after the company used their publicly-available code to train its latest AI tool.

On a website launched to spearhead an investigation of the company, programmer and lawyer Matthew Butterick writes that he has assembled a team of class-action litigators to lead a suit opposing the tool, called GitHub Copilot. Read More

#devops, #legal