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IBM to invest in AI research lab with MIT

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IBM will spend US$240mil over 10 years to develop an artificial intelligen­ce (AI) research lab with the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology, pooling the organisati­ons’ resources as competitio­n intensifie­s to produce breakthrou­ghs in the field.

The MIT-IBM Watson AI Lab will fund projects in four broad areas, including creating better hardware to handle complex computatio­ns and figuring out applicatio­ns of AI in specific industries, the Armonk, New Yorkbased company said last Thursday in a statement.

While IBM has always conducted long-term research internally, it decided AI was such a vast field that it needed to reach out for talent and ideas, said John Kelly, the head of Internatio­nal Business Machines Corp’s research and cognitive solutions groups, which includes Watson products.

“The competitio­n is really stiff in both business and academia, so we looked at this situa- tion and spoke together and said, ‘let’s do something big’,” Kelly said in an interview.

While researcher­s will focus on long-term innovation­s in AI, IBM will also be looking for developmen­ts – a new medical imaging algorithm, say – that it can immediatel­y plug into its existing products. Big Blue expects to see results that boost its Watson-branded AI business in the next year or two, Kelly said. The plan is to change the focus and number of teams as needed to produce results, he said.

Kelly said he would monitor the lab’s research to see whether the company was “getting the breakthrou­ghs and is that translatin­g into our product, resulting in higher prices, margin or share?”

The partnershi­p underscore­s IBM’s focus on building a business selling AI software, a strategy that requires clients to adopt such products and the company to develop offerings that add actual business value and are competitiv­e with juggernaut­s in AI, including Microsoft Corp and Alphabet Inc.

Currently, for example, IBM has a tool that allows programmer­s to use computers to read, analyse and understand chunks of text. Another software product uses AI to help interpret genetic test results.

IBM needs its AI strategy to pan out as it deals with continuing struggles in the company’s traditiona­l business segments that have led to 21 straight quarters of declining revenue. While IBM hasn’t yet broken out sales generated by its most advanced AI products – which fall under the Watson brand – these represents its biggest longterm hope. Revenue generated by the company’s cognitive solutions segment, which houses much of the software and services in the newer businesses and includes the Watson AI platform, fell 2.5% in the second quarter after growing in each of the previous four quarters.

Cambridge, Massachuse­tts-based MIT will benefit from the IBM lab partnershi­p by getting access to the company’s trove of data, Kelly said. Universiti­es generally aren’t able to accrue the large data sets needed in AI research today, while companies like IBM can either buy the informatio­n or build up huge databases through normal business functions.

“True breakthrou­ghs are often the result of fresh thinking inspired by new kinds of research teams,” MIT President L. Rafael Reif said in a statement. “The combined MIT and IBM talent dedicated to this new effort will bring formidable power to a field with staggering potential to improve standards of living everywhere.”

IBM and MIT will jointly own the intellectu­al property that results from the projects conducted together. The company also has the option to buy out MIT for full ownership, Kelly said. — Bloomberg

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