A.I. IN THE NEWS
Huawei plants A.I. seeds in Singapore. Chinese tech company Huawei has debuted an A.I. research lab in Singapore and plans to train over 1,000 software developers in A.I., reported The Straits Times of Singapore. Other big tech companies with A.I. research offices in Singapore include Salesforce and Alibaba.
Warehouse mania. Aeon, Japan's biggest supermarket operator, has signed a deal with British online grocer Ocado Group to outfit Aeon's facilities with robots and related automation technology to better compete with Amazon, the Nikkei Asian Review reported. Ocado claims that with its robots and other technology "it can ship orders out of its warehouses in 15 minutes, about five times as fast as the competition," the article said.
Considering using A.I. for hiring? Several companies and researchers are developing A.I. that promises "more accountability, and combats — rather than perpetuates — employment discrimination," reported PBS News Hour. The article highlights job-recruiting startup Blendoor and noted "a company that used Blendoor to hire interns increased their underrepresented minority by six times the amount they had recruited the previous year."
China has its eyes on A.I. Chinese tech companies like ZTE, Dahua, and China Telecom are attempting to influence international standards on facial recognition technologies, The Financial Times reported. "Standard writing gives companies an edge in the market by aligning global rules with the specifications of their own proprietary technology," the article said.
EYE ON A.I. TALENT
The state of Illinois hired Tammy Roust to be its chief data officer, news publication Statescoop reported. Roust was previously an associate director and risk analyst for the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission.
Cosmetics company Glossier hired Pawan Uppuluri to be the startup's chief technology officer, tech publication GeekWire reported. Uppuluri previously worked at Amazon as a director in charge of Alexa-related projects, among other roles.
Scaling A.I.: The Secret Sauce
A new study shows that 84% of C-suite executives believe they need A.I. to achieve their growth objectives, yet 76% report they struggle with how to scale. However, there's a group of Strategic Scalers that are getting it right, successfully moving beyond proof of concept and seeing up to 3x the return on their A.I. investments.
Learn more
EYE ON A.I. RESEARCH
Facial scanning as a heart-monitoring tool. Researchers from The Chinese University of Hong Kong, the University of Sydney, Australia, and other institutions published a paper in the medical journal JAMA Cardiology about using facial-scanning technologies and neural networks—software that learns—to detect the heart condition atrial fibrillation in patients. "To our knowledge, this is the first study to demonstrate detection of AF with high accuracy from multiple patients concurrently with a single camera," the researchers wrote.
FORTUNE ON A.I.
Want a SIM Card in China? You'll Now Need to Get Your Faced Scanned First—By Grady McGregor
What Makes People Love Waze More Than Google Maps and Apple Maps? Its Army of Unpaid Human Editors—By Alyssa Newcomb
China Once Welcomed the World's Trash. Now It's Using A.I. and Facial Recognition to Handle Mountains of Its Own—By Grady McGregor
BRAIN FOOD
About China's big A.I. spending…The Center for Security and Emerging Technology at Georgetown University published an analysis of how much money the Chinese government is spending on artificial intelligence research. The authors said that China likely spent "a few billion dollars" on A.I.-related research initiatives as opposed to the "tens of billions of dollars" that other groups have suggested. "While we did not analyze U.S. AI R&D spending in any depth for this paper, our results indicate that China's spending in 2018 was on the same order of magnitude as U.S. planned spending for FY 2020, as documented elsewhere," the authors wrote.
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