China Daily

Experts at AI event urge US to get on track

Some participat­ing in Silicon Valley conference suggest forming plan

- By CHANG JUN in Santa Clara, California junechang@chinadaily­usa.com

The United States should stop lamenting China’s technologi­cal innovation and advances in artificial intelligen­ce and focus instead on investing in education and science research, experts from both countries said.

At Saturday’s Committee of 100 annual conference in California’s Silicon Valley, Feifei Li, chief scientist at Google Cloud AI/ML and director at the Stanford AI Lab and Vision Lab, said the administra­tion of US President Donald Trump should continue to invest in basic science, STEM (science, technology, engineerin­g and mathematic­s) education, research and public universiti­es to “invest in the future”.

In response to skepticism and concerns in the US that China will overtake the US in AI research and applicatio­ns, Li said “there will always be competitio­n” in science and tech innovation, but the fundamenta­l question for the US government to ask itself is whether it has its own plan and strategy to move ahead in technology developmen­t.

The State Council unveiled in 2017 a national AI guideline that calls for developing technology, research and educationa­l resources in AI to achieve major breakthrou­ghs by 2025 and make China an AI innovation center by 2030.

It is China’s first comprehens­ive guideline on AI, and experts are deploying AI technologi­es in visual image recognitio­n; visual tracking; rendezvous and docking in space; navigation and positionin­g; mission planning; and spacecraft fault diagnosis.

In contrast, the Trump administra­tion has proposed cutting the federal budget, which would eliminate some research programs that affect NASA, energy research and climate and environmen­tal science programs.

“If the US is not willing to increase its investment in science, technology and AI, then no amount of measures against China through tariffs, through other restrictio­ns (are) going to keep the United States’ leadership (in those fields),” former US ambassador to China Gary Locke said at the C100 summit luncheon.

Locke said it’s ironic that some US politician­s who criticized China for its decadeslon­g low-end economy of high pollution are now objecting to China shifting toward an innovation-and-tech-based economy.

“It’s only natural for China (to transform in this direction),” he said.

Meanwhile, Li emphasized that “science fundamenta­lly has no borders. Not a company nor a country owns technology,” she said, adding that she wants to see AI developed for the good of humanity.

“At the end of the day, we will all benefit,” Li said.

“We can develop new companies and technologi­es. There is tremendous value to the consumers,” said Jonathan Woetzel, director of the McKinsey Global Institute, on the vibrant dialogue between tech entreprene­urship in Silicon Valley and China.

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