China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Ontario, China look to team up on AI

- By NA LI in Toronto renali@chinadaily­usa.com

Experts from Ontario and China are seeking more collaborat­ion in artificial intelligen­ce and robotics.

On Wednesday, they attended the Ontario-China AI and Robotics Collaborat­ion Workshop, co-hosted by the Ontario Ministry of Research, Innovation and Science and the Consulate General of China in Toronto.

Bringing together academic and industry representa­tives to share research and commercial collaborat­ion opportunit­ies along with the latest trends, the workshop also attracted delegates from leading Chinese universiti­es and technology companies.

“I have a deep impression of Canada’s AI and robotics technologi­es,” said Huang Tiejun, head of the delegates and chair of the Department of Computer Science at Peking University. “Canada has the world’s top experts and technology in the area, and we expect future cooperatio­n,” said Huang, who shared a presentati­on on “Next Generation AI & Brain-like Computing” at the workshop.

“The event is a great opportunit­y for Canada and China to collaborat­e and develop AI and robotics technologi­es,” said Elissa Strome, executive director of Pan-Canadian Strategy at Canadian Institute for Advanced Research. “There is great research strength and expertise in both countries and tremendous opportunit­ies for us to bring these together to do even bigger and better.”

Establishi­ng science and technology relationsh­ips with China is a priority for Ontario, Strome said. In 2008, 2013 and 2017, the Ontario provincial government and the Ministry of Science and Technology of China signed three rounds of memorandum­s of understand­ing on research and innovation for a total of 15 years.

A joint research-funding program, the Ontario-China Research and Innovation Fund (OCRIF), was launched in 2011 to support bilateral strategic research collaborat­ion projects by investing up to $2 million ($1 million each) to support strategic bilateral research collaborat­ions.

“This year we are looking at AI and robotics. Both the government­s of Ontario and China have identified AI and robotics as strategic areas of focus for research and commercial­ization collaborat­ion,” said Peter McFadzean, manager, partnershi­ps at the Ontario Centres of Excellence.

“We’ve done energy storage previously and also biomateria­ls previously. Over perhaps two to three years, we look for milestones along the way, and we look for successful outcomes and the commercial opportunit­ies in both Ontario and China,” McFadzean said.

“Here we can see great opportunit­ies in the collaborat­ion, but it seems that it will take quite a long time, at least half a year, to start up the cooperativ­e projects due to difference­s from two sides,” said Don Qiu, director of the Case Department at the Institute for Data Science, Tsinghua University.

“We are thinking of building a communicat­ions platform to work together to figure out the problem and speed up the collaborat­ion,” Don said.

According to Consul General He Wei, opening-up and innovation are a trend in society and the basic component of China’s rapid developmen­t over the past 40 years. Last year, China released a new AI developmen­t plan to further accelerate the pace of AI research and industrial­ization.

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