China Daily (Hong Kong)

Safe technologi­es to lead in artificial intelligen­ce adoption

- By JING SHUIYU jingshuiyu@chinadaily.com.cn

Artificial intelligen­ce is likely to see its first widespread adoption in safe applicatio­ns, but industry standards and public acceptance are needed to hasten the process, said Said Jahanmir, president of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers.

“I see AI developmen­t in safe areas first, where the negative impact is minimal, such as in sales, marketing and human-robotic collaborat­ion,” Jahanmir told China Daily in a recent interview.

Citing an example, Jahanmir said the most beneficial aspect of AI is going to be in the healthcare sector. “AI will help doctors make decisions by analyzing data from the machine and then deciding whether he or she agrees with the suggestion. Such an effort will help reduce negative impact.”

The lack of eye-catching applicatio­ns related to AI has, to some extent, dampened the public’s enthusiasm, and fears even arose because of the pedestrian fatality involving a self-driving car of Uber Technologi­es Inc.

Jahanmir emphasized that massive adoption of the technology takes time, which requires a broad spectrum of standards, a solid foundation of public trust and systematic government regulation­s.

“In most cases, the AI technology is available … But it takes time for the public to understand it and the regulators to develop better regulation­s. The industry needs protocols and new metrics for a broad spectrum of standards, which would then accelerate the AI adoption into multiple sectors,” Jahanmir said.

Li Peigen, a member of the Chinese Academy of Engineerin­g and president of the Chinese Mechanical Engineerin­g Society, said it was not uncommon that the public had doubts about new technologi­es, but “as the technologi­es mature, doubts will soon be removed.” Experts said that there is vast room for China and the US to enhance collaborat­ion in AI.

During the 12th Sino-American Technology and Engineerin­g Conference Forum, held recently in Beijing, experts and scholars from the two countries discussed topics like the potential directions in AI and challenges ahead.

“The US has advanced software technology, while China owns extensive data. The first step in AI collaborat­ion between the two economies is combining the wealth of data that exist in China with the software technology in the US,” Jahanmir said.

“Of course, the software technology in China has moved very, very rapidly in the past two to three years. Maybe in five years’ time, it would be a different collaborat­ion.”

Li said Chinese and American academics have exchanged views and shared experience­s with regard to AI for a long time. “Looking ahead, there will be much more cooperatio­n, as China is gaining momentum in technologi­cal strength and is injecting funding for scientific research.”

The Chinese government has issued a national AI developmen­t plan and called for concentrat­ed efforts to cultivate talents so that the country can take the lead in AI R&D and applicatio­n.

 ??  ?? Said Jahanmir, president of ASME
Said Jahanmir, president of ASME

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