CN China overtakes US in AI research


TOKYO -- China is overtaking the U.S. in artificial intelligence research, setting off alarm bells on the other side of the Pacific as the world's two largest economies jockey for AI supremacy.

In 2020, China topped the U.S. for the first time in terms of the number of times an academic article on AI is cited by others, a measure of the quality of a study. Until recently, the U.S. had been far ahead of other countries in AI research.

One reason China is coming on strong in AI is the ample data it generates. By 2030, an estimated 8 billion devices in China will be connected via the Internet of Things -- a vast network of physical objects linked via the internet. These devices, mounted on cars, infrastructure, robots and other instruments, generate a huge amount of data.

China views AI as a way to make up for labor shortages in anticipation of a shrinking population, said Weilin Zhao, a senior researcher at Itochu Research Institute.

AI is used in a range of industries and greatly affects a nation's competitiveness and security. The U.S. National Security Commission on Artificial Intelligence, headed by former Google CEO Eric Schmidt, warned in a report in March that the U.S. may lose the initiative in AI to China. As the U.S. responds to this challenge, bilateral competition in AI has heated up -- with global implications.

In June, a student named Hua Zhibing enrolled in Tsinghua University in Beijing. Hua has been in love with literature and art since birth, she says. But Hua is no ordinary student. "She" is an AI-powered virtual student whose image has been seen around the world on Weibo -- China's answer to Twitter -- and other social media.

Equipped with the ability to learn, Hua absorbs data such as text, images and videos, the university says. Hua has the cognitive abilities of a 6-year-old child. Within a year, the system will be able to think like a 12-year-old, China's state-run Xinhua News Agency predicts. Hua can write poems and draw. It is expected to be able to create websites in the future.

Hua is based on Wudao 2.0, an AI model developed under the leadership of the Beijing Academy of Artificial Intelligence. The aim is to develop a standardized form of AI capable of performing a variety of intellectual tasks once exclusive to humans.

Hua has advanced linguistic and image-processing capabilities, thanks to the work of more than 100 researchers. The tool has 10 times more parameters -- a measure of how smart an AI model is -- than the GPT-3 which made its debut in the U.S. in 2020 and drew attention for writing a smooth essay.

Last year China overtook the U.S. in terms of AI-related academic citations for the first time, accounting for 20.7% of the total, versus 19.8% for the U.S., according to a report from Stanford University. Since 2012, China has released 240,000 academic papers on AI, far outstripping the U.S. which has published 150,000, according to British research specialist Clarivate. Chinese studies have produced excellent results in image recognition and generation, among others.

Developing AI with advanced linguistic and other capabilities requires vast human and financial resources. Only "a handful of players" can do so, says Mamoru Komachi, an associate professor at Tokyo Metropolitan University who specializes in computational linguistics.

China has an array of academic institutions and companies with the firepower to stay on the cutting edge of AI, including Tsinghua University, Peking University, the Chinese Academy of Sciences, Baidu, and Xiaomi. These universities and companies all participated in the Beijing Academy of Artificial Intelligence, which created Wudao 2.0.

While U.S. companies and universities remain strong in AI, China's growing dominance is apparent. At the Conference on Neural Information Processing Systems, a leading international conference on AI, researchers from China accounted for 29% of the presentations in 2019, the highest share. The U.S. trailed with 20%.

While Chinese AI researchers have often performed well in the U.S., China has worked hard in recent years to develop talent at home. Tsinghua University and Shanghai Jiao Tong University, which are both known for advanced AI studies, as well as other Chinese universities, including Zhejiang University, the Harbin Institute of Technology and Northwestern Polytechnical University, are each reported to have around 2,000 AI researchers with published work.

In 2017, China adopted the "New Generation Artificial Intelligence Development Plan" with the aim of becoming the center of global innovation. Chinese companies are also becoming highly sophisticated technologically. One, iFlytek, has won an international voice synthesis competition for 14 years in a row.

It is clear that the U.S. is worried about China's rapid rise in AI. The fact that the U.S. is shutting out Chinese companies out of the country when it comes to the use of personal data that determines the performance of AI is evidence of this. If the U.S. and China continue to develop their own AI, a global clash over competing standards may be inevitable.
 
In 2020, China topped the U.S. for the first time in terms of the number of times an academic article on AI is cited by others, a measure of the quality of a study.
Since 2012, China has released 240,000 academic papers on AI, far outstripping the U.S. which has published 150,000
Ignoring the fact that how many times a paper gets cited is a very faulty measurement of quality (papers often get cited for the sole purpose of refuting their claims), the fact that the Chinese have nearly 100,000 more papers on the topic than Americans do and they're only just now surpassing us in total number of citations demonstrates that the Chinese papers are, on average, less noteworthy than the American ones.
 
This has been known for years at this point, the Chinese are dumping a ton of effort and money into AI research.

The US should be worried, say what you will about China the US can’t get complacent unless it wants to be beaten on things like this.

China knows they can’t match the US military wise, but in AI? It’s very possible they could be the leaders.
 
If I recall, the Chinese also replaced their own news broadcasters with actual A.I. as well

Ignoring the fact that how many times a paper gets cited is a very faulty measurement of quality (papers often get cited for the sole purpose of refuting their claims), the fact that the Chinese have nearly 100,000 more papers on the topic than Americans do and they're only just now surpassing us in total number of citations demonstrates that the Chinese papers are, on average, less noteworthy than the American ones.
If only, though, we as a country can beat the Chinese in I.Q. levels. Not that it means much, but currently our literacy rates are on the verge of going downward.
 
"She" is an AI-powered virtual student whose image has been seen around the world on Weibo -- China's answer to Twitter -- and other social media.
Twitter is not allowed to operate in China and everyone is forced to use domestic stuff so they can be spied on. This is a very soft way of avoiding the reality of Chinese social media.
Hua has the cognitive abilities of a 6-year-old child. Within a year, the system will be able to think like a 12-year-old, China's state-run Xinhua News Agency predicts. Hua can write poems and draw. It is expected to be able to create websites in the future.
"Artificial Intelligence" is not literally man-made intelligence, at least not traditionally. The AI buzzword stuff has been off the charts for the past few years and this looks like the CCP latching onto that because it sounds good. No one has even come close to mimicking the mental capabilities of a puppy or even an insect. "AI" as it stands now, is only good for learning very specific things based off of controlled datasets and is more akin to running a program through the gauntlet trillions of times to train it for specific things.

All of this to say, Hua is full of shit and Tay was probably more sophisticated and definitely the cooler girl.
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Since 2012, China has released 240,000 academic papers on AI, far outstripping the U.S. which has published 150,000...
Quantity > quality
The US does this as well but not near as bad as China, if their reputation is anything to go by.

While Chinese AI researchers have often performed well in the U.S., China has worked hard in recent years to develop talent at home.
China also benefits from piggybacking directly off of US research and university resources. They send people to universities in the US and Europe to study and participate in research, then bring them back and put what they learned abroad to use domestically. The CCP isn't as vocally proud of this technique, for some reason.

I do think the US needs to work hard to maintain the edge on AI as it's possibly the next best tool for flexing on the world stage, but I think most of the "China numbah one" stuff regarding research right now is just the CCP's attempt to look mighty.
Cut off Chinese nationals from US universities and let's see who loses more.
 
If only, though, we as a country can beat the Chinese in I.Q. levels
Iirc, the Chinese data on literacy, math competency, and IQ are all coming from Shanghai and Hong Kong. It would be like if we only used data from our two highest IQ cities and used that to represent our entire country.

America has a lot of fat rednecks and ghetto niggers. China has a lot of poor rice farmers and entire communities where their economy revolves around a mountain of other nations' trash.
 
China ain't doing shit. Not that it matters. Their dam is going to collapse soon and kill half the country, leaving the other half to slaughter the CCP once and for all. Good look sucking up for dollars then, ChinaWood; your reckoning is coming.
oil tanker spill environmental disaster worth of cope in one post, yup, that dam is going to collapse any day now
*one year long race riot and top heavy financial hoodwink later*
yeeep, any day now

one country is definitely collapsing
 
China knows they can’t match the US military wise, but in AI? It’s very possible they could be the leaders.
They're not though. AI papers are notoriously easy to churn out: find a problem that someone has already built a model for, steal that model (maybe add in another convolution layer if you're feeling whimsical), throw more data/computation at it to lower the loss curve, and then copy-paste into whatever unintelligible scrawl you got the intern to shit out.

China isn't leading in AI research. All of the important people actually developing the methodology and capable of rubbing neurons together to further ideas are specifically not Chinese. It's almost like all these people know how to do is steal, and they have the manpower, money, and lack of foresight to waste time on pointless paper pushing. Sure, they'll get a lot of articles out of it that are highly cited (by each other, mostly. See how it works?), but no deeper understanding is gained from any of their worthless work.

Too bad Chinese academic research is garbage and AI is proving to be more and more useless with each passing day.
100% this.
 
It's almost like all these people know how to do is steal, and they have the manpower, money, and lack of foresight to waste time on pointless paper pushing.
Someday this kind of "America best, everyone else sucks and can't beat us" attitude is going to be the undoing of America, if not in a few decades than a few hundred years. Someday someone is going to come along and steal your lunch, while you were too busy jerking off about how that's impossible.

Americans lack the foresight to see how their arrogance will effect them and are coasting off their success in a post WW2 world that couldn't challenge them.
 
Someday this kind of "America best, everyone else sucks and can't beat us" attitude is going to be the undoing of America, if not in a few decades than a few hundred years. Someday someone is going to come along and steal your lunch, while you were too busy jerking off about how that's impossible.
Sure, that's possible. It won't be the Chinese though, is all I'm saying.
 
Someday this kind of "America best, everyone else sucks and can't beat us" attitude is going to be the undoing of America, if not in a few decades than a few hundred years. Someday someone is going to come along and steal your lunch, while you were too busy jerking off about how that's impossible.

Americans lack the foresight to see how their arrogance will effect them and are coasting off their success in a post WW2 world that couldn't challenge them.
I don't know any Americans today saying "America best, everyone else sucks and can't beat us," I'm not sure what orifice you pulled that out of but it's dirty and wrong.

Americans right now are worried about our collapsing economy, corrupt politicians, racial tensions, the possibility of another civil war and a bunch of other shit. It's a small minority stomping around screeching "AMERICA FUCK YEAH" these days and they are the exception rather than the rule.
 
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