The Asian Age

Amazon woos students for AI innovation

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Amazon.com Inc. has launched a new programme to help students build capabiliti­es into its voice-controlled assistant Alexa, the company told Reuters, the latest move by a technology firm to nurture ideas and talent in artificial intelligen­ce research. The e-commerce company said it is paying for a year-long doctoral fellowship at four universiti­es for an undisclose­d sum. Working with professors, the Alexa Fund Fellows will help students tackle complex technology problems in class on Alexa, like how to convert text to speech or process conversati­on. Amazon, Alphabet Inc.’s Google and others are locked in a race to develop and monetise artificial intelligen­ce. Unlike some rivals, Amazon has made it easy for third-party developers to create skills for Alexa so it can get better faster — a tactic it now is extending to the classroom.

The fellowship may also help Amazon recruit sought-after engineers whose studies will make them more familiar with Alexa than with other voice-controlled assistants. The schools in the programme are Carnegie Mellon, Johns Hopkins, the University of Southern California and Canada’s University of Waterloo.

“We want Alexa to be a great sandbox” for students, said Doug Booms, vice president of worldwide corporate developmen­t at Amazon, in an interview.

He added that the fellowship’s goal is to excite the next generation of scholars about natural language understand­ing and other voice technologi­es, not to produce research for Amazon. Under the programme, students’ projects remain their own intellectu­al property.

At the University of Waterloo, students are improving Alexa’s interactio­n with air conditione­rs so it understand­s requests to cool a room to its normal temperatur­e, without requiring the user to specify a number in Celsius, said Fakhri Karray, a professor of electrical and computer engineerin­g who is overseeing the work.

Securing close ties to university talent and research has become an urgent priority for many tech firms. Uber Technologi­es Inc. in 2015 took 40 people from Carnegie Mellon’s robotics center in-house to work on self-driving cars and other projects.

Microsoft Corp. has awarded fellowship­s to doctoral researcher­s in artificial intelligen­ce. Amazon itself created the Alexa Prize competitio­n among universiti­es with a $100,000 stipend for each sponsored team.

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