EYE ON A.I. NEWS
Where are my voice records? Amazon said it keeps the transcripts and voice recordings of people's interactions with the Alexa voice-activated digital assistant indefinitely and will only delete the information if users manually delete it themselves, CNET reported. But the report noted that "there are still records from some conversations with Alexa that Amazon won't delete, even if people remove the audio."
Is this what Facebook thinks about my photos? A recent Facebook outage publicly revealed how the company's A.I. systems automatically tag user photos with words to describe the photos, the Verge reported. Because of the outage, some Facebook users may have seen words like "people smiling, people dancing" or other "tags" in place of their personal photos, the report said.
Baidu and Intel partner on chip smarts. Intel said it's collaborating with Chinese search company Baidu to develop a specialized computer chip to speed the process of training deep-learning systems. Earlier this year, Intel said it was working with Facebook to develop a computer chip to aid with A.I. inference, which happens when an A.I. system acts on the data it ingests.
A.I. pizza party. CNN reported about research from MIT and the Qatar Computing Research Institute that described an "AI system that can look at a photo of pizza and deduce what ingredients should go on which layer of the pie." The challenge was for the researchers to create an A.I. that could understand how to properly layer a pizza instead of merely assembling the pizza haphazardly.
HEALTHCARE A.I.
Bruce Feinberg, the vice president and chief medical officer at Cardinal Health Specialty Solutions, writes in healthcare news service STAT about A.I.'s potential impact in healthcare. Feinberg and his firm surveyed over 180 oncologists and found that most believed A.I. that automates administrating tasks would be the most helpful to their profession. "This response aligns with research we conducted last year showing that oncologists need extra hours to complete work in the electronic medical record on a weekly basis and the EMR is one of the top factors contributing to stress at work," wrote Feinberg.
The Race to Reinvent Healthcare
As patients become more knowledgeable, price-conscious and expectant of seamless service in healthcare, the industry needs to adapt. That, for one, means embracing analytics and A.I. to deliver more personalized, patient-centric care.
Learn more now
EYE ON A.I. HIRES
Avast has hired Michal Pěchouček to be the cybersecurity firm's chief technology officer. Pěchouček is a professor at the Czech Technical University in Prague, where he leads the university's computer science department and artificial intelligence center.
EYE ON A.I. RESEARCH
A.I. to detect the age of a brain. Researchers from Columbia University and Carnegie Mellon University published a paper about using deep learning to estimate the age of brains based on a dataset of MRI brain scans. The researchers write that in order for their techniques to be used more widely, "they must be trained on adequately diverse datasets that reflect the diversity of the populations on which the model might potentially be deployed."
A.I.-powered stock portfolios. Researchers from Columbia University, Beijing Institute of Technology, and the University of Science and Technology of China, Hefei published a paper about using reinforcement learning techniques, in which computers learn by trial, to create an investment portfolio. The researchers claim that their techniques proved "better than the Dow Jones Industrial Average and the traditional portfolio allocation strategies."
FORTUNE ON A.I.
Facebook and Google's Data-Control Tactics Aren't Just a Privacy Issue Anymore – By David Meyer
iOS 13 Will Use AR Magic to Fix the iPhone's Most Annoying FaceTime Flaw – By Xavier Harding
White House Social Media Summit: Critics of Facebook, Google, Twitter Invited to Sound Off – By Alyssa Newcomb
BRAIN FOOD
Jumping to automated conclusions. The Economist interviewed one of the authors behind a highly-cited, but widely-misunderstood academic paper about automation and jobs. Many people misinterpret the paper as saying that advanced automation technologies will make nearly half of U.S. jobs redundant by the mid-2030s. It turns out that the authors of the paper "make no attempt to estimate how many jobs will actually be automated," The Economist noted. Instead, the authors believe that any job loss due to automation "will depend on many other things, such as cost, regulatory concerns, political pressure and social resistance," according to the article.
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