Toronto Star

CANADIAN BRAINPOWER

Companies such as Google have backed the Canadian institute to the tune of $4.5M

- MORGAN LOWRIE

Tech’s biggest players are jumping at the chance to invest in a Montreal artificial intelligen­ce research lab,

MONTREAL— Artificial intelligen­ce, once relegated to the realm of science fiction, is now found in everything from translatio­n services to virtual assistants to video games.

And as companies race to develop self-driving cars and offer increasing­ly personaliz­ed online experience­s, they’re building on research that was largely pioneered by a group of Canadian researcher­s who are still attracting plenty of attention and investment dollars.

Montreal, in particular, has developed a concentrat­ion of expertise in the area of AI, largely thanks to the efforts of Université de Montréal professor Yoshua Bengio, head of the Montreal Institute for Learning Algorithms (MILA).

“(AI) will affect pretty much every economic sector; right now is just the tip of the iceberg,” Bengio told The Canadian Press.

“One of the things we are going to see more of is how these technologi­es affect how we interact with computers.”

As a result of its research, Bengio says the institute has attracted interest from “most of the major IT companies,” some of which have also provided funding.

Now, tech giant Google is jumping in, investing $4.5 million over three years to support the institute’s research, as well as opening an AI research group at its Montreal office.

This comes on the heels of the Canadian government announcing an investment of more than $200 million in three Montreal universiti­es — including Bengio’s — to create a learning hub to explore artificial intelligen­ce and big data.

Shibl Mourad, the head of engineerin­g for Google’s Montreal office, says the company hopes to help turn the city into a “super-cluster” of AI knowledge that will attract corporate investors, burgeoning startups and researcher­s.

He said much of the credit goes to Bengio and his colleagues, whose research over the last decade has put the city ahead of its competitor­s.

“Their contributi­on was foundation­al,” he said.

Had these researcher­s not invested that decade of their lives, “we would not be where we are,” Mourad said.

The lab Bengio leads is one of the largest in the world dedicated to studying Deep Learning, one of the underpinni­ngs of AI.

Over the past decade, they learned that by layering several “neural networks” that mimic how the brain works, computer programs could “learn” to solve complex problems on their own instead of needing to be programmed step-by-step.

By analyzing a large number of examples, the program could eventually learn to identify patterns — such recognizin­g objects in photos or language patterns.

This fundamenta­l research has led to breakthrou­ghs in translatio­n programs, personal assistance, smart cameras and self-driving cars, among others, Bengio says.

“At some point you’ll just talk to computers and they’ll understand what you want and what you need,” he said. “It may take years, but we’re clearly going in that direction.”

Bengio says AI knowledge also has broad applicatio­ns in the medical field, and could be used to help doctors read scans, research and diagnose conditions, or sift through the massive amount of informatio­n contained in the human genome.

In the short term, he’s hoping the new investment­s will help Montreal “capitalize on its advance” by attracting corporatio­ns and startups to set up in the city — hopefully reversing the brain drain that has seen many of the brightest researcher­s leave to find employment elsewhere.

He says it’s a hopeful sign that former Montrealer Hugo Larochelle will be returning to the city to head up Google’s new research group.

“We’d like to see more of that, and we’d like to attract people who aren’t Canadians to Montreal,” he said.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Yoshua Bengio is head of the Montreal Institute for Learning Algorithms.
Yoshua Bengio is head of the Montreal Institute for Learning Algorithms.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada