By Roy Zimmermann (opens in new tab), Director, Microsoft Research
Microsoft Research Blog
Microsoft Research Forum Episode 3: Globally inclusive and equitable AI, new use cases for AI, and more
In the latest episode of Microsoft Research Forum, researchers explored the importance of globally inclusive and equitable AI, shared updates on AutoGen and MatterGen, presented novel use cases for AI, including industrial applications and the potential of multimodal models to improve assistive technologies.
The theme of this year’s Faculty Summit 2017 (opens in new tab), which occurred earlier this week, was The Edge of AI. The meeting on Microsoft’s sun-splashed Redmond campus involved more than 500 prominent AI academic and Microsoft researchers who brought depth and context to the theme with thought-provoking presentations and demos of leading-edge research. We heard from leading luminaries in collaborative AI, deep learning, machine comprehension, deep neural nets and more. We saw demos of AI applications and services that demonstrated how some aspects of AI are moving to the center of our digital lives. We also heard from some of our keynote speakers that while much progress has been made, much work remains if our AI systems are to become better at sensing, learning, reasoning and understanding natural language. And we were challenged to continue to seek out errors – not just solutions – on the path toward a more general artificial intelligence.
If you attended the Summit but missed some of the sessions, or if you didn’t attend but would like to explore some of the mind-expanding content we covered in two days of keynotes and break-out sessions, please enjoy our on-demand (opens in new tab) Faculty Summit video coverage.
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