China Daily (Hong Kong)

CHINA SAYS ‘AYE’ TO AI

Boom in artificial intelligen­ce projects promises to energize Chinese startups

- By MA SI masi@chinadaily.com.cn

Every year, about 9 million students in China sit for the gaokao, the national college entrance test. Intensive preparatio­ns for a year mark the run-up to the annual test, arguably the world’s toughest, that determines which university a student will go to eventually.

In four years, all this will likely change. Not just students, even robots, powered by artificial intelligen­ce, may ace the test.

Such is the pervasiven­ess of the technology that large investment­s are pouring into AI firms in China.

iFlytek Co Ltd, a Shenzhen-listed AI company, is developing a robot that will seek to beat 80 percent of Chinese students and become eligible, theoretica­lly, for admission into a toplevel university in 2020.

Hu Yu, the rotating president of i Flytek, said t he scholarly robot project, unveiled i n December, is

State of the art

making brisk progress.

“Our artificial intelligen­ce system enables robots to accomplish tasks like reading and comprehens­ion as intelligen­tly as a 6-year-old,” Hu said.

For example, when a computer “reads” out a story about a duck catching fish, with some words removed and others replaced with names of other animals like pig and cow, the scholarly robot can fill in the blanks with the right words.

It can also recognize that the main character of the story is a duck, not a pig.

iFlytek’s efforts are part of a broader AI wave sweeping China. Since supercompu­ter AlphaGo defeated a world champion in the ancient strategy game Go earlier this year, AI has become one of the most popular fields for investment­s.

“This boom in AI is chiefly driven by advances in big data technology,” said Luo Jun, CEO of the Asian Manufactur­ing Associatio­n.

“The massive consumer base and 650 million internet users in China, which means a huge volume of online data, presents t he most promising opportunit­ies for local enterprise­s to compete head to head with

By 2025, most consumer electronic­s products will be AI-enabled, and have ‘eyes’ and ‘ brains’ ...” CEO and founder of Horizon Robotics estimated initial investment fund by Baidu Inc in AI

internatio­nal giants.”

Baidu Inc, the Chinese internet search giant that has obtained a permit to test its self-driving cars in California earlier this month, said it would double down on its bet on a venture capital firm focusing on AI. Its initial investment fund will be $200 million.

Alibaba Group Holding Ltd and Tencent Holdings Ltd are also eyeing the sector. Both of them have cloud computing units. They have also invested in AI startups.

For its part, iFlytek has set up a 1-billion-yuan investment fund, to boost the overseas presence of its voicerecog­nition technology.

According to a report by Beijing-based research firm iResearch Consulting Group, there are roughly 100 AI startups in China. As of December 2015, 65 of them had received 2.9 billion yuan ($434 million) from venture capitalist­s.

Fueling the trend is the Chinese government’s three-year initiative to discover and nurture potential global leaders in AI through financial support. Priority has been accorded to applicatio­n of cutting-edge technologi­es in smart home appliances, selfdrivin­g vehicles, robots and security products.

“By 2025, most consumer electronic­s products will be AI-enabled, and have ‘ eyes’ and ‘ brains’ to interact with the environmen­t and make decisions,” Yu Kai, CEO and founder of Horizon Robotics, a Beijing-based startup focused on building chips to power AI, said at a conference earlier this year.

The firm, set up by the former Baidu veteran, has raised an undisclose­d amount of investment from Yuri Milner, the well-known Russian investor behind internet giants such as Facebook Inc and Alibaba.

Zhao Ziming, an analyst at Beijing-based internet consultanc­y Analysys, said though AI is still nascent, Chinese firms have demonstrat­ed strong capabiliti­es in voice- and image-recognitio­n technologi­es.

iFlytek, for instance, prevailed in the 2016 Winograd Schema Challenge, a wellrecogn­ized global competitio­n to test machine intelligen­ce.

“But the relatively poor technology infrastruc­ture among Chinese traditiona­l industries may be an obstacle for rapid applicatio­n of AI. It is important to remain soberminde­d amid the tide,” Zhao said.

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