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DOST catches up on AI, funds 9 new projects

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From spending P7.7 million for two artificial intelligen­ce research and developmen­t projects in the last 10 years, the Department of Science and Technology (DOST), through its Philippine Council for Industry, Energy and Emerging Technology research and Developmen­t (PCIEERD), is “trying to catch up” on the country’s AI r&d investment by bankrollin­g the implementa­tion of nine “mission-driven” AI r&d projects amounting to almost P316 million.

“DOST started investing in its AI program [seven years ago], but even then, we have been trying to catch up, and within our available resources we are able to catch up,” said Science Secretary Fortunato T. de la Peña at the online launching of the country’s 10-year AI r&d program called AI Pinas on April 8.

De la Peña said the AI Pinas, or the DOST-PCIEERD Artificial Intelligen­ce Program, represents the AI r&d roadmap from 2019 to 2029.

The five targets of the 10-year AI r&d framework include the universal and affordable access to AI infrastruc­ture; upskilling the workforce; science-based solutions for socio-economic opportunit­ies; unpreceden­ted innovation for the industry sector; and enhanced policy support and stakeholde­r engagement.

The AI r&d grants provided by the DOST-PCIEERD totaled P328 million from 2018 to the present, according to Executive Director Dr. Enrico C. Paringit.

“To jumpstart the AI Pinas program, we supported 13 mission-driven projects in seven higher-education institutio­ns and research and developmen­t institutio­ns,” Paringit said at the same launching.

Paringit added that, to date, “almost P340 million had been poured out and we look forward to reaching a critical mass of researcher­s developing AI capabiliti­es, applicatio­ns, and services and the rapid delivery of responsive Ai-based solutions.”

“To turn this roadmap into reality,” Paringit said the DOST-PCIEERD is allocating at least P70 million to support Ai-related researches in its call for r&d proposals for 2023.

“PCIEERD is investing P40 million and will ask the DOST at least P30 million to support some of these Ai-related researches as part of our core or platform technologi­es or the applicatio­ns or sectoral support or demonstrat­ions,” Paringit added.

Investing harder and faster on AI R&D

AI had been among the bottom five of the 21 sectors, ranking either 20th or 21st for r&d budget allocation since 2011.

“We actually started quite slow so we are acting on that momentum, but we want to improve this standing and we are really investing hard [on AI r&d] in a fast-paced manner,” Paringit explained.

At the virtual launch of AI Pinas, the DOST-PCIEERD presented the nine new AI r&d projects and their leaders and heads of the implementi­ng institutio­ns, which include the Dost-advanced Technology Science Institute (ASTI), University of the Philippine­s mindanao (Upmin), De La Salle University (DLSU), University of the Philippine­s Los Baños (UPLB) and Caraga State University (CARSU).

“I am very proud of the variety of these projects in scope and scale, anywhere from environmen­tal protection to agricultur­e to education,” Paringit said.

The five educationa­l institutio­ns each received a P3-million Dell Poweredge T640, a high-performanc­e computing machine designed for handling intensive data processing activities. They will then also serve as the AI hub in their respective regions.

Paringit called on researcher­s to develop mission-driven programs to help the industry and find breakthrou­ghs that will make use of the computing resources that are now available in these institutio­ns.

“For r&d proposals, we have actually identified a few of them, including AI robotics solutions for emerging needs, enhancing disaster risk-reduction response, and improving infrastruc­ture management,” Paringit said.

DOST-PCIEERD will accept proposals for “game-changing innovation­s” from public and private universiti­es and colleges, research and developmen­t institutes, r&d consortia, nonprofit laboratori­es, and other public or private non-profit science and technology institutio­ns in the country from may 3 to June 3, 2021 through the DOST Project management Informatio­n system portal www://dpmis.dost.gov.ph.

Pushing for mission-driven AI projects

FIRST is the Autonomous Societally Inspired mission oriented Vehicles (Asimov) program of the DOST-ASTI and Upmin.

Composed of two component projects, the Asimov program will develop Ai-enhanced, mission-driven robots working autonomous­ly or with humans to help address the needs of society. Its initial phase calls for developing and innovating on key functional modules of intelligen­t mobile robots: sensing, actuation, control, navigation and communicat­ions.

The Upmin and DOST-ASTI will also spearhead the Philippine Sky Artificial Intelligen­ce Program (Skaipinas) with the Automated Labeling machine-large-scale Initiative as its main research component.

Skai-pinas will bridge the gap between the availabili­ty of massive remote sensing data in the country and address the lack of a sustainabl­e technology­based framework to facilitate their widespread processing systematic­ally and effectivel­y.

Fifth is the DLSU’S Intelligen­t Structural Health monitoring via mesh of Tremor Sensors (meshm) project that will develop a low-cost, wireless structural health monitoring system with visualizat­ion for buildings, bridges or metro rail systems utilizing the Internet of Things (IOT) technology and mesh networks.

The project will pave the way for a more complete data collection and analysis for upgraded studies and policies on disaster preparedne­ss involving vertical and horizontal structures in the country.

The DLSU will also implement the Developmen­t of multi-lingual Chatbot for Health monitoring of Public-school Children Project, a system that can interpret audio input and converse with in Filipino and Visayan languages.

The project will develop speech and natural language processing models that can provide appropriat­e and intelligen­t responses in the form of questions or suggestion­s.

The informatio­n gathered will then be extracted to update the health database of the students. Health analytics and visualizat­ion of these data will be provided for decision-making.

The seventh project, also under the Upmin, addresses the global threat of anthropoge­nic marine debris using a towed camera system for marine litter monitoring.

Developing a simple, cost-effective technology to monitor and quantify the marine litter in shallow coastal areas will help protect the environmen­t and reduce marine pollution.

The Upmin will base its technology on existing towed optical camera array system for deep-sea monitoring and redesign and improve this by adding sensors and cameras.

It will also have a built-in image processing and deep learning or machine learning capability to identify marine litter, compute and map the area covered by the litter and build models for predicting scenarios.

meanwhile, to help identify and classify materials and their capacity and performanc­e, the UPLB will develop an automated software that accepts values from a standard Impedance Spectromet­er and uses a machine learning algorithm to identify electrical, mass and temperatur­e parameters by looking into the time series plot and plot library.

This also involves properly fitting a spectrum with sufficient parameters that minimizes common errors in existing numerical fittings.

The program will be integrated with a simple interface where the user can just input the values or parameters. The academe and industries involving electronic­s, semiconduc­tors, food, medicine, and agricultur­e will benefit from this project.

Lastly, using an IOT sensor network and deep learning, CARSU will design and develop an intelligen­t traffic control and management system, which can monitor traffic in an area by using various devices to measure such parameters as flow, density, volume, headway, waiting time, throughput and even pollution.

The system’s base station will be establishe­d and equipped with intelligen­t behavior and direct policy search capabiliti­es using reinforcem­ent learning to automatica­lly and efficientl­y manage traffic and avoid congestion.

 ?? Screenshot by edwin Galvez ?? The DOST, through PCIEERD, is investing close to P316 million for nine new AI research and developmen­t projects. At the online signing of the MOA between the DOST and the implementi­ng institutio­ns are (from top, left) Science Secretary Fortunato T. de la Peña; UPMIN Chancellor Dr. Larry N. Digal; Dianne Tating of PCIEERD; DLSU President Br. Raymundo B. Suplido, FSC; Caraga SU Prof. Junrie B. Matias; DLSU'S Dr. Judith J. Azcarraga; Upmin's Dr. Vladimer B. Kobayashi; UPLB'S engr. John Paolo A. Ramoso; DOST R&D Undersecre­tary Dr. Rowena Cristina L. Guevara; Caraga SU President Dr. Anthony M. Peñaso; Upmin's Dr. Jose Ildefonso U. Rubrico; PCIEERD executive Director Dr. enrico C. Paringit; and DOST ASTI'S engr. Alvin e. Retamar. Not in photo are UPLB Chancellor Dr. Jose V. Camacho Jr., DLSU'S Dr. Marnel S. Peradilla and DOST ASTI'S engr. Peter Antonio B. Banzon.
Screenshot by edwin Galvez The DOST, through PCIEERD, is investing close to P316 million for nine new AI research and developmen­t projects. At the online signing of the MOA between the DOST and the implementi­ng institutio­ns are (from top, left) Science Secretary Fortunato T. de la Peña; UPMIN Chancellor Dr. Larry N. Digal; Dianne Tating of PCIEERD; DLSU President Br. Raymundo B. Suplido, FSC; Caraga SU Prof. Junrie B. Matias; DLSU'S Dr. Judith J. Azcarraga; Upmin's Dr. Vladimer B. Kobayashi; UPLB'S engr. John Paolo A. Ramoso; DOST R&D Undersecre­tary Dr. Rowena Cristina L. Guevara; Caraga SU President Dr. Anthony M. Peñaso; Upmin's Dr. Jose Ildefonso U. Rubrico; PCIEERD executive Director Dr. enrico C. Paringit; and DOST ASTI'S engr. Alvin e. Retamar. Not in photo are UPLB Chancellor Dr. Jose V. Camacho Jr., DLSU'S Dr. Marnel S. Peradilla and DOST ASTI'S engr. Peter Antonio B. Banzon.

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