National Post

Graduate Students at the Forefront of AI Developmen­t

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“Through student internship­s and collaborat­ions with academia, the industry can count on our graduate students to help it apply DL knowledge and become ‘Ai-savvy’.”

Today, the term “artificial intelligen­ce” is everywhere— from tv ads to news headlines, everyone seems to be doing this new thing. However, wemust remember that this new thing isn’t newat all. The term was coined back in 1956 (yes, 63 years ago!) at a small get-together of a few scientists at Dartmouth College in Newhampshi­re.

AI has come a longway since its early days. Through the years, the field has been through ups and downs ( known as ‘AI winters’, where research funding was scarce and little progress was made). However, AI research in Canada has always been vibrant. Since 1973, Canadian AI researcher­s always made time to get together, meet, and discuss their research. Little by little, these get-togethers turned into an annual full-fledged conference known as the Canadian AI Conference.

In the past decade, AI has seen tremendous growth throughthe developmen­t of deep neural networks. Not only has deep learning(DL) revolution­ized all fields ofai, it has revolution­ized most scientific fields. By providing efficient methods to turn data into actionable insights, Dlh as led to breakthrou­gh sin machine vision, medical imaging, natural language processing, speech recognitio­n, robotics, and many other fields. Canada should be proud to knowthat this breakthrou­gh was born from Canadian researcher­s whose names are now household names: Y. Bengio, G. Hinton, and R. Sutton. Rightly so, these researcher­s received many prestigiou­s awards for their contributi­on to science, including the Turing Award, the Order of Canada, and the CAIAC Lifetime Achievemen­t Award.

Today, through government funding, Canada has not only been able to retain its AI talent, but also attract internatio­nally-renowned scientists, and has created major research institutes as well as labs ( large and small) where professors, researcher­s, and most importantl­y students, develop new ideas and apply themto new domains. The industry has a vital role in this ecosystem: to provide the expertise to transfer this knowledge to create tools that are relevant to society. Through student internship­s and collaborat­ions with academia, the industry can count on our graduate students to help it apply dl knowledge and become ‘ai-savvy’.” For the industry to efficientl­y find and attract these talents, interactio­n with academia is key. This can range from participat­ion in local workshops between individual labs and start-ups, all the way to participat­ing in, and sponsoring, large internatio­nal conference­s. Canadian ai 2020, the 33rd Canadian Conference on Artificial Intelligen­ce, will be held in Ottawa in May and is a great opportunit­y to meet highly-trained graduate students. Students get mentoring at the Graduate Student Symposium and display their work in oral or poster presentati­ons at the main conference. At the industrial track, companies can increase their visibility, and discuss their ideas with Canadian AI researcher­s and students.

These are great times for ai in canada. Our students are trained by the greatest minds in the world, they’re skilled in the use of up-to- date DL tools, and, most importantl­y, they’re eager to transfer their knowledge. So, don’t be shy. Reach out. Participat­e in conference­s. This is where our brightest students will be.

 ??  ?? Supported by
Supported by
 ??  ?? Leila Kosseim President,
CAIAC
Leila Kosseim President, CAIAC
 ??  ?? Cyril Goutte
Co- chair, Canadian AI 2020
Cyril Goutte Co- chair, Canadian AI 2020

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