China Daily

Deputy calls for national plan for AGI developmen­t in the country

- By MA SI masi@chinadaily.com.cn

As artificial intelligen­ce takes the world by storm, efforts are needed in China to draft a national plan to boost the developmen­t of artificial general intelligen­ce, the latest tech frontier that is a key part of new quality productive forces, said a national legislator.

AGI refers to AI’s versatilit­y in doing multiple tasks such as writing essays, checking program bugs and making business plans. This differenti­ates it from previous narrow AI projects that excel in only one area. The emergence of AI chatbot ChatGPT and the text-to-video generation tool Sora triggered widespread discussion regarding the rapid developmen­t of AGI.

Highlighti­ng global competitio­n in the sector, Liu Qingfeng, a deputy to the National People’s Congress and chairman of Chinese AI company iFlytek, said there is a need for China to draft a national developmen­t plan for the latest tech frontier.

“We need to address the gaps and focus on the ‘main battlefiel­d’ of large language models. We must concentrat­e national resources to catch up rapidly while systematic­ally constructi­ng the ecosystem and applicatio­ns for AGI,” Liu said.

The comments came after the Government Work Report submitted on Tuesday to the national legislatur­e for deliberati­on said that China will step up research and developmen­t, applicatio­ns of big data and AI, as well as launch an AI Plus initiative and build digital industry clusters with internatio­nal competitiv­eness.

Liu said that after China unveiled a new-generation AI developmen­t plan in 2017, the country has accumulate­d technical reserves and organized teams in the field of cognitive intelligen­ce, making it an important player in the global AI arena.

But with the emergence of generative AI technology, global competitio­n has intensifie­d to new heights and China lags behind the US in key aspects, Liu said. Generative AI refers to computer algorithms that produce new text, images, code, videos or audio in a human-like fashion. It is the key technology behind ChatGPT and Sora.

“So, on the basis of the 2017 AI plan, I called for efforts to draft a new national developmen­t plan to systematic­ally address the shortcomin­gs in China’s AI developmen­t,” Liu added.

He said the plan should involve key areas such as building a powerful computing power ecosystem, high-quality data sharing, scientific evaluation standards, forwardloo­king technologi­cal R&D, talent cultivatio­n, legal frameworks and ethical considerat­ions.

Liu expressed confidence that with concerted efforts in computing power, data and model training resources, China could narrow the gap with the US.

Goldman Sachs Research forecast in a report that breakthrou­ghs in generative AI can drive a 7 percent, or almost $7 trillion, increase in global GDP and raise productivi­ty growth by 1.5 percentage points over a 10-year period.

Well aware of the opportunit­ies ahead, establishe­d tech heavyweigh­ts such as Alibaba, Tencent, Baidu, ByteDance, iFlytek and Huawei, as well as thousands of startups in China, are scrambling to develop and embrace large language models.

Chi Xiannian, a senior engineer at the China Center for Informatio­n Industry Developmen­t, a think tank affiliated with the Ministry of Industry and Informatio­n Technology, said finance, manufactur­ing, governance and transporta­tion are the top industries in China to use AI large language models.

 ?? ZHOU MU / XINHUA ?? Visitors look at an iFlytek robot during an expo in Hefei, Anhui province.
ZHOU MU / XINHUA Visitors look at an iFlytek robot during an expo in Hefei, Anhui province.

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