Kuwait Times

Google opens AI center in China as competitio­n heats up

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BEIJING: Google announced yesterday that it will open a new artificial intelligen­ce research center in Beijing, tapping China’s talent pool in the promising technology despite the US search giant’s exclusion from the country’s internet. Artificial intelligen­ce, especially machine learning, has been an area of intense focus for American tech stalwarts Google, Microsoft and Facebook, and their Chinese

competitor­s Alibaba, Tencent and Baidu as they bid to master what many consider the future of computing.

AI research has the potential to boost developmen­ts in self-driving cars and automated factories, translatio­n products and facial recognitio­n software, among other innovation­s. Google’s move to open a Beijing office focused on fundamenta­l research is an indication of China’s AI talent, widely seen as being neck-and-neck with the United States in research capability. “Chinese authors contribute­d 43 percent of all content in the top 100 AI journals in 2015,” Li Feifei, a researcher leading the new center, wrote in a blog post on Google’s website.

“We’ve already hired some top experts, and will be working to build the team in the months ahead.”

Li noted that Chinese engineers formed the backbones of the winning teams in the past three ImageNet

Challenges, an internatio­nal AI competitio­n to test which computing technology is better at recognizin­g and categorizi­ng pictures.

Chinese search engine Baidu’s team was banned for a year for breaking the rules during the 2015 competitio­n.The country’s large population and strong mathematic­s and sciences education has nurtured a slew of engineerin­g talent. Many land in Beijing’s burgeoning AI tech startup scene, supported by universiti­es and government-affiliated institutes. It is not hard to find AI talent in China, said Yuan Jirui of SeetaTech, one of the start-up’s core team of founders from the Institute of Computer Technology at the Chinese Academy of Sciences.

“There’s a trend of AI talent in China being quite young,” she said. “AI education is expanding to high schools and middle schools.”—AFP

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