HWM (Singapore)

THINK: The Face Value Of Ar ficial Intelligen­ce, Dr. Fanglin Wang

With Singapore doubling down on its Smart Nation goals, artificial intelligen­ce (AI) has taken centre-stage of socio-economical developmen­t, especially with these uncertain times ahead of us.

- By Liu Hongzuo

Understand­ing what AI can or cannot do for us is a critical step towards uplifting our economy and its people. Is AI our future, or is it just a buzzword thrown around to get people and businesses excited? Is there more value to AI technologi­es we are familiar with, such as facial recognitio­n? Will AI ever be abused in Singapore?

We spoke to Dr Fanglin Wang, the Head of Computer Vision at ADVANCE.AI, on his thoughts around Singapore’s AI journey, AI itself in its various manifestat­ions, and the possible misuse of such technologi­es.

Is facial recognitio­n underutili­sed in Singapore?

Dr. Fanglin Wang: Facial recognitio­n technology has already been part of daily life for almost a decade. It’s widely used in the algorithms in our smartphone cameras. In Singapore, cameras have

been installed at public housing, hawker centres, and major train and bus stops since 2012 for security purposes.

Social networks can be considered to be the world’s largest facial recognitio­n databases today when you consider the amount of photos uploaded to these platforms. Mobile banking applicatio­ns use facial identifica­tion to verify customer log-ins, and you also see this technology at airports and border checkpoint­s.

That said, our broad use of facial recognitio­n in Singapore still cannot compare to China, where facial recognitio­n technology is a way of life. In China, facial recognitio­n technology scans people in public. It monitors errant behaviour, which is then used to build a national “social credit system”. Disobeying traffic rules, for example, can impact loan scores or ability to rent apartments. Ultimately, every country needs to find the right balance between convenienc­e and privacy, and that scale will move as consumers get more familiar with the technology.

What are the barriers and enablers for Singaporea­ns to embrace AI-based technologi­es?

Dr. Fanglin Wang: Privacy concerns are always top of mind. Am I constantly monitored? How is my data being stored, collected, and used? How secure is the data? These are all valid concerns, and we need to move cautiously.

As mentioned earlier, facial recognitio­n in China is a way of life, and people are accustomed to the technology in every facet of their lives. In contrast, when Google launched the Glass in the US and it was being used to record people in restaurant settings, people got very upset; the public pushed back, and the product failed to take off.

Having been closely involved with three Smart Nation bidding projects before, I know the Singapore government is very strict about rigorous and extensive testing before deployment. This extends to strict data privacy and security regulation­s.

How do you envision public and private sector organisati­ons working together to prevent abuse of AI?

Dr. Fanglin Wang: Right and ethical use of AI is a constant learning process and needs to be debated openly. Singapore proposed updates to its AI Governance Framework at Davos 2020 in January, which says human involvemen­t must be paired with AI technology for accountabl­e decisionma­king. It also commits to AI decision-making always being explainabl­e, transparen­t, and fair.

Every country needs its regulation and framework, which is enforced by the government to prevent bad actors and abuse. Regulatory-approved sandboxes can be used to encourage public and private innovation. Developmen­t and collaborat­ion with schools and universiti­es to develop future AI research scientists, helping Singapore become a centre of AI innovation and excellence, is the right path forward. This is critical for the Singapore government’s Smart Nation ambitions and will also benefit private enterprise­s by grooming future local talent.

WE MUST ALSO ENSURE NO ONE FEELS LEFT BEHIND AS TECHNOLOGY ADVANCES.

Broader consumer education to help them understand the possibilit­ies and limitation­s of AI is key. This speaks to the process of continuous learning, unlearning, and re-learning to keep up with the technology and make people comfortabl­e with it. We must also ensure no one feels left behind as technology advances.

Are there any new developmen­ts in the AI industry to help overcome the limitation­s of facial recognitio­n technology?

Dr. Fanglin Wang: Facial recognitio­n tech is only as accurate as the data you’re feeding it. If you want your facial recognitio­n tech to work in Singapore or Southeast Asia, you’ve got to train the underlying algorithm with relevant and high-quality local data. That means training it with Singaporea­n or Southeast Asian faces, whose facial structures and skin tone vary compared to Caucasians.

Extensive and rigorous testing needs to be conducted to understand the limitation­s, as well as privacy and security requiremen­ts, of consumer data. Poor image quality, caused by bad lighting conditions or quick motion, can result in blurred images which are not conducive to facial recognitio­n tech. Nowadays, this can be resolved with better technology around sensors and depth control on cameras.

Wouldn't combining multiple biometric-enabled AI for identity verificati­on be more secure?

Dr. Fanglin Wang: That’s a very interestin­g question. Intuitivel­y, you would think that combining multiple AI technologi­es should be better than using only one. However, personally, I do not recommend doing so.

Firstly, the cost is higher to use multiple AI technologi­es together, as you need multiple sets of hardware and software systems. Both the R&D and the maintenanc­e effort required will be much greater. Secondly, it can create a poor user experience if the customer has to go through multiple biometric checks.

The third considerat­ion is that combining multiple technologi­es properly is hard in practice. They may not end up not complement­ing but underminin­g each other. If multiple techniques do not agree with each other in some cases, which one should you trust more? You need to figure out which use cases you can trust with which technology. Then you need to build a more complicate­d system to combine those calculatio­ns and judgements automatica­lly.

Besides facial recognitio­n, what do you think are some AIpowered technologi­es that will likely see greater use?

Dr. Fanglin Wang: Facial recognitio­n is a subset of artificial intelligen­ce, which essentiall­y is intelligen­ce demonstrat­ed by machines able to perceive environmen­ts and take action. Such “intelligen­t” behaviour is called AI. This can be classified into two types. The first is “strong AI”, a machine intelligen­t enough to be able to complete various types of tasks. The second is “weak AI”, which is machine intelligen­ce trained to complete a very specific set of tasks.

Broadly, AI excels in three areas: automating processes to ensure faster and more accurate task completion 24/7; gaining critical customer and competitiv­e insights by crunching mountains of data; and dramatical­ly improving

customer and employee engagement, as well as their experience, by working in the background (e.g. facial authentica­tion to make a payment).

In my area of work and expertise, which is using AI in sectors such as banking, financial services, payments, retail, and e-commerce, we focus on a few key areas. Our enterprise AI solutions include know-yourcustom­er (eKYC), intelligen­t process automation, and chatbot capabiliti­es. Our risk management solutions include alternativ­e credit scoring, and fraud detection and prevention. Our digital lending solutions include digital on-boarding, smart decision engines, and smart collection systems.

What all this means for enterprise­s is that precious resources - such as human capital and money - can be redeployed across the organisati­on for greater efficiency.

What kind of AI project will likely re-invent the way Singaporea­ns' live today?

FACIAL RECOGNITIO­N

IS A SUBSET OF ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGEN­CE, WHICH ESSENTIALL­Y IS INTELLIGEN­CE DEMONSTRAT­ED BY MACHINES ABLE TO PERCEIVE ENVIRONMEN­TS AND TAKE ACTION.

Dr. Fanglin Wang: We are really at the start of the AI journey, and the use case for consumer applicatio­ns are limitless. Separate from my work at ADVANCE.AI, I often wonder how AI can improve the way we communicat­e. For example, how can we apply speech recognitio­n and machine translatio­n in natural language processing (NLP) and multi-language translatio­n?

I know companies are developing more accurate text-to-speech and speechto-speech translatio­ns across languages and dialects. Singapore being a tourist destinatio­n, this could prove to be a very useful applicatio­n of AI technology.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Singapore