China Daily

Tencent to advance into new AI areas

- By HE WEI hewei@chinadaily.com.cn

Tencent Holdings Ltd is looking to deepen its artificial intelligen­ce push into transporta­tion solutions, security and protection, as well as voice recognitio­n, realms that were once seen as stronghold­s of other tech majors.

The endeavor to advance into new areas builds upon the company’s initial success in developing AI for medical diagnosis, a mission designated to Tencent by the country’s top industry and internet regulator, according to Liu Yongsheng, head of Tencent AI Lab.

“For the purpose of better city management, there’s plenty of space for different companies to leverage and deploy their AI capabiliti­es. Every player is just taking a tiny slice of the pie,” he told China Daily on Friday.

Ideally, algorithms and big data can be combined to protraffic vide live traffic prediction­s, so that safety precaution measures and contingenc­y plans can be introduced in advance, he said.

This is an area where arch rival Alibaba Holding Group Ltd has gained an early foothold. It pioneered a smart traffic management system called City Brain in Hangzhou, where average speed was reported to have increased 15 percent since its launch in September 2016. Early this year, the firm exported a similar mechanism to Malaysia, the first of its kind overseas.

“Neverthele­ss, there are just so many facets in urban planning that companies can dig deep into,” Liu said. “We don’t necessaril­y have to compete with each other and can all be part of city planning in the long run.”

Voice recognitio­n is another area on which Tencent is placing bets. An indigenous group is working to optimize accuracy from voice conversion to machine translatio­n, functions that are embedded in WeChat, the ubiquitous messaging app that has nearly 1 billion users.

“We are developing our own team and own technologi­es,” Liu said, when asked if they are banking on technologi­es of iFlyTek, a domestic voice recognitio­n specialist.

China has upheld the developmen­t of AI as a national strategy and has recruited Tencent, Alibaba, iFlyTek and Baidu Inc to an “AI national team” to have them each focus on one specific field.

While Tencent has been tasked to use its computer vision for medical diagnosis, Baidu will specialize in autonomous driving, Alibaba in smart city and iFlyTek in voice intelligen­ce.

According to Liu, Tencent will further expand the use of its AI-backed cancer-detection product Miying to a wider array of diseases.

Currently it is used in reading CT scans and screening of four types of cancers including lung cancer, the most common cancer in China, in around 60 hospitals across 20 provinces.

“We are anticipati­ng an even bigger role for Miying this year, by having AI assist human doctors in their daily diagnosis,” he said.

We don’t necessaril­y have to compete with each other and can all be part of city planning in the long run.” Liu Yongsheng, head of Tencent AI Lab

 ?? A JING / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? Visitors look at Tencent’s visible big data exchange platform at the 16th China Internet Conference in Beijing on July 12, 2017.
A JING / FOR CHINA DAILY Visitors look at Tencent’s visible big data exchange platform at the 16th China Internet Conference in Beijing on July 12, 2017.

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