China Daily (Hong Kong)

Shanghai sets sights high for AI

- By HE WEI in Shanghai hewei@chinadaily.com.cn

Shanghai is looking to build itself into a national hub for artificial intelligen­ce and will sharpen its focus on the sector’s basic research, pilot zones, policies and talents to bolster that goal.

The announceme­nt was made by Li Qiang, Shanghai’s Party secretary, on Monday, when he addressed the 2018 World Artificial Intelligen­ce Conference that brought together leading academicia­ns and entreprene­urs from home and abroad in the AI realm.

The city should focus on basic AI research in brain science and general intelligen­ce, while accelerati­ng breakthrou­ghs in core technologi­es such as intelligen­t sensing, Li said.

This is buoyed by the city’s growing number of universiti­es and research institutes that have flocked to establish AI research labs and recruited a batch of AI talents in areas like integrated circuits, computer vision, and brain engineerin­g.

Another area where Shanghai enjoys unique advantages is the establishm­ent of pilot zones, Li noted, where AI-powered applicatio­ns in manufactur­ing, finance, healthcare, autonomous driving and robots are encouraged to test the waters in the city.

These would become viable thanks to a variety of industry-specific applicatio­n scenarios in Shanghai and the surroundin­g Yangtze River Delta region, China’s most affluent area, the mines of data in traffic, goods, capital to inform and train AI algorithms,

What they say

as well as the sound IT infrastruc­tures that support the new generation of mobile communicat­ions and internet of things technologi­es.

To shore up that ambition, the municipali­ty vowed to address new challenges deriving from AI, including research on relevant local regulation­s, tackling ethical issues, ramping up intellectu­al property protection and enhancing AI-related technical standards.

Li also promised to take further steps to create a favorable environmen­t for talents and encourage some of the world-leading AI figures to set foot in Shanghai.

His remarks were echoed by a 22-point circular issued by the local authoritie­s on the same day, in which Shanghai planned to construct 60 AI applicatio­n scenarios and over 100 AI demonstrat­ion projects. The directives also proposed the establishm­ent of three to four towns and five pilot zones featuring AI, with no timeline being disclosed.

Shanghai’s emphasis on AI has pulled in tech majors from Alibaba Group Holding Ltd to Tencent Holdings Ltd to bring more AI-focused businesses to the city.

“The matured industrial chain of smart chips, software and hardware services, along with the ability to attract technology talents have equipped Shanghai with an exceptiona­l advantage in AI developmen­t,” said Pony Ma, chairman of Tencent, whose computer vision research arm Youtu Lab is based in Shanghai.

Microsoft Corp is looking at setting up an arm of its Asian research house in Shanghai this year, fueling the city’s ambition to seek digital upgrading and develop artificial intelligen­ce talents, said the company’s executive vicepresid­ent Harry Shum.

“Shanghai is home to many leading companies that leverage Microsoft’s cloud computing offerings and AI technologi­es,” he said. “We have carried out extensive collaborat­ion with top research institutio­ns and startup firms in the city, and we strive to create an open ecosystem that helps drive innovation.”

He Qi contribute­d to this story.

 ?? TANG YANJUN / CHINA NEWS SERVICE ?? A visitor to the 2018 World Artificial Intelligen­ce Conference, which opened on Monday in Shanghai, plays Go with a robot.
TANG YANJUN / CHINA NEWS SERVICE A visitor to the 2018 World Artificial Intelligen­ce Conference, which opened on Monday in Shanghai, plays Go with a robot.

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