Current directory: /home3/bjinbymy/public_html/indianext/wp-content/mu-plugins Artificial Intelligence Sees More Funding, But Needs More People And Better Data - AI Next
Indianext
No Result
View All Result
Subscribe
  • News
    • Project Watch
    • Policy
  • AI Next
  • People
    • Interviews
    • Profiles
  • Companies
  • Make In India
    • Solutions
    • State News
  • About Us
    • Editors Corner
    • Mission
    • Contact Us
    • Work Culture
  • Events
  • Guest post
  • News
    • Project Watch
    • Policy
  • AI Next
  • People
    • Interviews
    • Profiles
  • Companies
  • Make In India
    • Solutions
    • State News
  • About Us
    • Editors Corner
    • Mission
    • Contact Us
    • Work Culture
  • Events
  • Guest post
No Result
View All Result
Latest News on AI, Healthcare & Energy updates in India
No Result
View All Result
Home AI Next

Artificial Intelligence Sees More Funding, But Needs More People And Better Data

October 25, 2021
AI

The state of artificial intelligence is promising, and it is increasingly ready for real-life enterprises. But there are shortages of talent, lack of diversity in the field, and concerns about the handling the data that fuels ever-more-sophisticated algorithms. 

These are some of the observations of Nathan Benaich and Ian Hogarth, prominent investors in artificial intelligence, who released their fourth annual and densely packed “State of AI” report reviewing developments in the field over the past year. While the report focuses on AI academia and specific advancements in medicine and other areas, there are important developments raised for those seeking to leverage AI and machine learning to move forward in building intelligent enterprises. “The under-resourced AI-alignment efforts from key organizations who are advancing the overall field of AI, as well as concerns about datasets used to train AI models and bias in model evaluation benchmarks, raises important questions about how best to chart the progress of AI systems with rapidly advancing capabilities,” Benaich and Hogarth state. 

Some notable AI developments over the past year include the following:

  • AI is now part of important real-life scenarios, including being applied to mission critical infrastructure such as national electric grids, automated supermarket warehousing optimization, drug discovery, and healthcare.
  • “Transformers,” a neural network-based deep-learning architecture, have emerged as a general purpose architecture for machine learning, increasingly applied to natural language processing (NLP) and computer vision.
  • Other developments mentioned include the rise of self-supervision in computer vision that require less training, and “textless” natural language processing based on Generative Spoken Language Modeling (GSLM), which enables the “task of learning speech representations directly from raw audio without any labels or text.”  
  • There has been record funding this year into AI startups, and IPOs for data infrastructure and cybersecurity companies that help enterprises retool for the AI-first era.

AI talent is a growing concern, as well as area of opportunity. “Computer research scientists, software developers, mathematicians, statisticians and data scientists saw an evolution of their employment that is far ahead of the general employed population,” Benaich and Hogarth state. “Computer science and engineering were the fastest growing undergraduate degrees over 2015 to 2018, accounting for 10.2% of all four-year degrees conferred in 2018. Their numbers increased by 34% and 25% respectively during the period, while the number of other awarded degrees increased 4.5% on average.”

Globally, Brazil and India are leading the way in AI employment growth, hiring more than three times more AI talent today than they were in 2017, matching or surpassing the hiring growth of Canada and the United States, they add. 

The gender and racial diversity data within United States organizations radically differ between technical and non-technical teams, Benaich and Hogarth state. There is “a massive lack of gender diversity in technical teams, while a better balance is achieved in product and commercial teams. African Americans and Hispanics constitute a lower share of the AI workforce than their share in the general workforce, with the severest drop coming from technical teams. These teams also have the highest share of Asian workers.” Interestingly, on a global level, “almost 30% of scientific research papers from India include women authors compared to an average of 15% in the US and UK, and far greater than four percent in China.”  

The venture capitalists point to concerns about managing big data in the AI space. “Careful data selection saves time and money by mitigating the pains of big data. Working with massive datasets is cumbersome and expensive. Carefully selecting examples mitigates the pain of big data by focusing resources on the most valuable examples, but classical methods often become intractable at-scale. Recent approaches address these computational costs, enabling data selection on modern datasets.”

Benaich and Hogarth point to the need for greater data quality data particularly in real-time situations, such as detecting or predicting life-threatening events. For example, they cite the threat of “data cascades,” defined by Google researchers as “compounding events causing negative, downstream effects from data issues.” These researchers warn “that current practices undervalue data quality and result in data cascades, pointing to factors such as “lack of recognition of the data work in AI, lack of adequate training, difficulty of access to specialized data for the studied region/population.” This calls for “developing metrics to assess goodness-of-data, better incentives for data excellence, better data education, better practices for early detection of data cascades, and better data access.” 

The VCs also predict that the coming year may see the launch of a research company focused on artificial general intelligence (AGI), “formed with significant backing and a roadmap that’s focused on a sector vertical, which could potentially involve developer tools or a life science application.

Source: zdnet.com

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Editors Corner

How can Artificial Intelligence tools be a blessing for recruiters?

Will Artificial Intelligence ever match human intelligence?

Artificial Intelligence: Features of peer-to-peer networking

What not to share or ask on Chatgpt?

How can Machine Learning help in detecting and eliminating poverty?

How can Artificial Intelligence help in treating Autism?

Speech Recognition and its Wonders in your corporate life

Most groundbreaking Artificial Intelligence-based gadgets to vouch for in 2023

Recommended News

AI Next

Google: AI From All Perspectives

Alphabet subsidiary Google may have been slower than OpenAI to make its AI capabilities publicly available in the past, but...

by India Next
May 31, 2024
AI Next

US And UK Doctors Think Pfizer Is Setting The Standard For AI And Machine Learning In Drug Discovery

New research from Bryter, which involved over 200 doctors from the US and the UK, including neurologists, hematologists, and oncologists,...

by India Next
May 31, 2024
Solutions

An Agreement Is Signed By MEA, MeitY, And CSC To Offer E-Migration Services Via Shared Service Centers

Three government agencies joined forces to form a synergy in order to deliver eMigrate services through Common Services Centers (CSCs)...

by India Next
May 31, 2024
AI Next

PR Handbook For AI Startups: How To Avoid Traps And Succeed In A Crowded Field

The advent of artificial intelligence has significantly changed the landscape of entrepreneurship. The figures say it all. Global AI startups...

by India Next
May 31, 2024

Related Posts

Google
AI Next

Google: AI From All Perspectives

May 31, 2024
Pfizer
AI Next

US And UK Doctors Think Pfizer Is Setting The Standard For AI And Machine Learning In Drug Discovery

May 31, 2024
Artificial-Intelligence
AI Next

PR Handbook For AI Startups: How To Avoid Traps And Succeed In A Crowded Field

May 31, 2024
openai
AI Next

OpenAI Creates An AI Safety Committee Following Significant Departures

May 31, 2024
Load More
Next Post
CHATBOTS

Why Conversational AI Means So Much More Than Chatbots

IndiaNext Logo
IndiaNext Brings you latest news on artificial intelligence, Healthcare & Energy sector from all top sources in India and across the world.

Recent Posts

Google: AI From All Perspectives

US And UK Doctors Think Pfizer Is Setting The Standard For AI And Machine Learning In Drug Discovery

An Agreement Is Signed By MEA, MeitY, And CSC To Offer E-Migration Services Via Shared Service Centers

PR Handbook For AI Startups: How To Avoid Traps And Succeed In A Crowded Field

OpenAI Creates An AI Safety Committee Following Significant Departures

Tags

  • AI
  • EV
  • Mental WellBeing
  • Clean Energy
  • TeleMedicine
  • Healthcare
  • Electric Vehicles
  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Chatbots
  • Data Science
  • Electric Vehicles
  • Energy Storage
  • Machine Learning
  • Renewable Energy
  • Green Energy
  • Solar Energy
  • Solar Power

Follow us

  • Facebook
  • Linkedin
  • Twitter
© India Next. All Rights Reserved.     |     Privacy Policy      |      Web Design & Digital Marketing by Heeren Tanna
No Result
View All Result
  • About Us
  • Activate
  • Activity
  • Advisory Council
  • Archive
  • Career Page
  • Companies
  • Contact Us
  • cryptodemo
  • Energy next
  • Energy Next Archive
  • Home
  • Interviews
  • Make in India
  • Market
  • Members
  • Mission
  • News
  • News Update
  • People
  • Policy
  • Privacy Policy
  • Register
  • Reports
  • Subscription Page
  • Technology
  • Top 10
  • Videos
  • White Papers
  • Work Culture
  • Write For Us

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

IndiaNext Logo

Join Our Newsletter

Get daily access to news updates

no spam, we hate it more than you!