China Daily (Hong Kong)

STUDENTS SET SIGHTS ON AI MAJORS

The rapidly expanding industry offers excellent career prospects

- By LIN SHUJUAN in Shanghai and MA ZHENHUAN in Hangzhou

Li Shuangying said she has high hopes that her 18-yearold son, who just took this year’s college entrance exam, will become a profession­al in the artificial intelligen­ce field.

She said he always has been one of the top students in his class at one of the leading high schools in Zhongshan, Guangdong province.

Zhongshan, which neighbors Guangzhou, Guangdong’s capital, has been one of China’s pioneering cities in embracing reform and opening-up. It thrived on labor-intensive industries, but recent rising labor shortages and costs have become a real threat.

In response, local manufactur­ers have been quick to embrace automation and adopt AI-assisted robots for survival.

The company Li works for, a medium-sized home appliance manufactur­er with annual output of about 1 billion yuan ($150 million), is no exception. Li said she used to bring her son to her workplace from time to time, and he has developed a strong interest in AI, automation and robots.

“We (the family) all agree that AI is the trend, and it holds great potential for future developmen­t,” Li said.

That view is shared by many prospectiv­e college students and their parents, who consider AI a desirable major.

Progressin­g at a dizzying pace, the sector presents rosy career prospects as China has the ambition to become a leading AI power by 2030.

Some experts have pointed out it holds an inherent attraction for the millennial generation, whose coming of age has coincided with the AI technology boom and its increasing penetratio­n into every aspect of daily life.

As a result, AI has become one of the most sought-after majors among prospectiv­e college students across the country.

Many believe the increasing interest in AI education will greatly boost China’s ability to produce specialize­d AI talent. Many others, however, are more cautious, warning against possible pitfalls brought by the “great leap in AI education”. They say this has resulted in a worrying trend of resorting to such education.

Great prospect

Featuring machine simulation of human intelligen­ce, including learning, reasoning and self-correction, AI, which is developing with robotics and virtual reality, has been considered a transforma­tive business force globally.

Given the nation’s focus on innovation, China aims to develop into a leading AI power by 2030 based on the surge in AI investment­s from domestic internet companies and others. Last July, the government issued the country’s New Generation Artificial Intelligen­ce Developmen­t Plan, which envisions China’s economy, military and society invigorate­d and empowered by artificial intelligen­ce.

Accelerati­ng the education of top AI talent has also been listed as a primary task in the plan, with the developmen­t of AI resulting in a strong demand for talent well-versed in this technology. According to China’s leading online recruitmen­t company Zhaopin, AI algorithm engineers were the positions most in demand last year, followed by database developmen­t engineers.

In response to the national strategy, the Ministry of Education in April issued the AI Innovation Action Plan for Colleges and Universiti­es. The plan envisions Chinese colleges and universiti­es becoming the global frontiers in AI and hotbeds of AI talent by 2030, while 50 world-class AI textbooks, 50 national-level high-quality online AI courses and 50 AI research centers will be establishe­d by 2020.

Expectatio­ns ran high among prospectiv­e high school students and their parents early this year when many universiti­es across the country set up new AI and related majors, and even AI research schools. At least 19 universiti­es, most of them among the country’s most prestigiou­s, have added AI engineerin­g as a new major for their undergradu­ate students, and the number is expected to reach 50 over the next two years.

High threshold

The rapidly increasing availabili­ty of AI-related majors has both excited and upset prospectiv­e students and their parents. On the one hand, more is better. On the other hand, a heightened enthusiasm about AI-related majors has, in turn, pushed the enrollment threshold to a new high.

Many prestigiou­s universiti­es that are traditiona­l stronghold­s in com- puter science and technology research, electronic engineerin­g and math, on which AI has developed, require a proven excellence in math, such as a good record in the provincial National Olympiad in Informatic­s. Some institutio­ns, such as Nanjing University and Duke Kunshan University, even set side interview sessions to screen prospectiv­e students for their communicat­ion skills, which are considered a bonus for AI talent.

“We value a student’s communicat­ion skills, because most AI innovation­s rely on teamwork,” said Li Xin, professor in electric and computer engineerin­g at Duke Kunshan University, a Sino-US partnershi­p between Duke University and Wuhan University, in Kunshan, Jiangsu province.

Communicat­ion skills are one of the major aspects looked for by universiti­es in internatio­nal partnershi­ps, such as Duke Kunshan University and the University of Not- tingham Ningbo China. This is anoth- er choice favored by prospectiv­e students offering the prospect of going overseas for further studies when they graduate. For such universiti­es, while the requiremen­ts for students’ ability in math is not as high, a high proficienc­y in English is a must.

Great leap

The high entrance bar is set to disappoint many who are interested, but experts say they should not be deterred in pursuing AI for their future careers despite failing to be enrolled as AI major undergradu­ates.

While many universiti­es in China have set up AI-related master’s programs and research projects for decades, AI alone has not been an undergradu­ate major in the country until recently.

This is because AI is essentiall­y multidisci­plinary, according to Yang Ming, professor at the School of Electronic Informatio­n Engineerin­g at Shanghai Jiao Tong University.

AI has long been considered and is still regarded by many experts as a pinnacle, built on a solid command of science in computers, math and biology, among others.

This has made the curriculum design of AI as an undergradu­ate major a challenge, the experts say, based on how to strike a balance between setting a solid foundation to enable lifelong learning and preparing students with hands-on experience for immediate career prospects.

In general, Yang said, AI education has two directions. One focuses on basic research of core technology, the other on real-life applicatio­n, which is essentiall­y data-driven.

“Over the past decade, big data has allowed the fast developmen­t of AI applicatio­ns, resulting in the industry boom we’re now experienci­ng,” Yang said. “However, the basic research of core technology has made little progress.”

Take automatic driving for example, considered a new technology by many, where the technology and related research have long existed. Yang was involved in some of the research when he was a doctoral student at Tsinghua University 20 years ago. He recently led a student team in cooperatio­n with a research company in designing and producing three driverless minibuses, which now offer free commuting services on the university’s two campuses.

“The core technology and concept behind (automatic driving) remains more or less the same,” Yang said.

As big data has contribute­d to the rise of the AI industry, people tend to forget that it is the decades of basic research on its core technology that has made such progress possible, Yang added.

This holds true even in China, as the country is engulfed by AI fever, driven mainly by market-oriented applicatio­ns.

Even as a student, Pan Baiwen, a junior in electronic engineerin­g at Shanghai Jiao Tong University, said he could feel that AI education was becoming too hectic.

“I spend a lot of time reading papers on AI research,” Pan said. “While there has been a rapid increase in the number of AI-related papers, most of them focus on applicatio­ns. Basic research on core technology, which is aimed at pushing the traditiona­l boundaries, is increasing­ly rare to find.”

Bai Ruibin, director of the department of computer science at the University of Nottingham Ningbo China, has another observatio­n.

“There is a growing social expectatio­n that a fresh undergradu­ate majoring in AI should be able to perform magic upon graduation,” Bai said.

Bai considers this worrying because “it is very tempting for universiti­es to tilt AI education to its applicatio­ns, which is risky and irresponsi­ble because AI applicatio­ns are progressin­g so fast that any related knowledge or skills can be outdated in three or five years.

“This approach to education is detrimenta­l to the industry’s longterm developmen­t.”

Instead, experts say university education should prepare students with the basic theoretica­l foundation and the ability to innovate, allowing them to learn and adapt for the rest of their careers.

Yang said, “China still needs to strengthen its basic research in AI and to encourage long-term cultivatio­n of talent for the purpose.”

No haste

“No haste” is the advice that Yang, Bai and many other professors have given to students interested in developing a career in the AI industry.

Duan Xinyu, a doctoral student whose expertise in AI research was learned at Zhejiang University, agrees.

He entered the university in 2010 as a major in computer science and developed an interest in AI in 2013 when discussion­s and applicatio­ns of audio and facial recognitio­n were taking off in China.

As one of the country’s pioneering institutio­ns in AI research, the university quickly introduced several courses on the subjects in the curriculum of a computer science major. Duan took to them immediatel­y and has progressed well in related research, earning him recommenda­tions and a scholarshi­p to continue his doctoral degree at the university.

“You have great leeway to learn and develop once you have built a solid basic science foundation during undergradu­ate years,” Duan said.

This insight has proved valuable for most prospectiv­e college students and parents, such as Li Shuangying and her son. As enrollment by prestigiou­s universiti­es in an AI major is limited to only a few, Li said that for a time the family had hesitated over whether her son should continue to choose AI-related majors at a less-desired university.

After numerous consultati­ons and assessment­s of her son’s interest and potential, Li said the family is now determined to support his dream of becoming an AI profession­al, even though the journey to achieve it could be arduous.

China still needs to strengthen its basic research in AI and to encourage long-term cultivatio­n of talent for the purpose.”

Yang Ming, professor at the School of Electronic Informatio­n Engineerin­g at Shanghai Jiao Tong University

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 ?? LIU YING / XINHUA ?? A driverless shuttle bus on the campus of Shanghai Jiao Tong University uses AI to navigate and can carry eight passengers at a time.
LIU YING / XINHUA A driverless shuttle bus on the campus of Shanghai Jiao Tong University uses AI to navigate and can carry eight passengers at a time.
 ?? LIU XIAO / XINHUA ?? Above: Students at Jiangsu University in Zhenjiang, Jiangsu province, design an AI-driven chair. YANG YU / FOR CHINA DAILYBelow: A student startup on facial recognitio­n at Northweste­rn Polytechni­cal University in Xi’an, Shaanxi province.
LIU XIAO / XINHUA Above: Students at Jiangsu University in Zhenjiang, Jiangsu province, design an AI-driven chair. YANG YU / FOR CHINA DAILYBelow: A student startup on facial recognitio­n at Northweste­rn Polytechni­cal University in Xi’an, Shaanxi province.
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