L’AI Week réunit la communauté mondiale de l’intelligence artificielle

 Les quatre jours d’événements comporteront des discours liminaires et des discussions de leaders de l’IA et de l’apprentissage automatique

EDMONTON, Alberta, 17 avr. 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — L’Amii (Alberta Machine Intelligence Institute) a annoncé le programme de l’AI Week, qui se tiendra du 24 au 27 mai à Edmonton, au Canada. Avec plus de 20 événements se déroulant sur quatre jours dans toute la ville, la célébration de l’excellence de l’IA de l’Alberta comprendra un discours académique de Richard S. Sutton, expert de premier plan en apprentissage par renforcement, qui parlera des futures orientations de la recherche dans ce domaine.

Cette semaine bien remplie inclura également des panels sur les parcours professionnels dans l’IA pour les enfants, l’IA pour un avantage concurrentiel et l’éthique de l’IA, des rencontres axées sur les carrières et les talents reliant les chercheurs d’emploi dans l’IA avec des entreprises de premier plan, ainsi qu’un symposium universitaire d’une journée entière rassemblant les esprits les plus brillants de l’IA. Les célébrations se termineront par une fête organisée dans un lieu secret qui sera bientôt dévoilé, ainsi que par la fête de rue Amiiversary, marquant 20 ans d’excellence en matière d’IA en Alberta. Pour en savoir plus sur le programme, rendez-vous sur www.ai-week.ca/program

« Au cours des 20 dernières années, l’Alberta est devenue l’une des principales destinations au monde pour la recherche et l’application de l’IA », a déclaré Cam Linke, PDG de l’Amii. « Avec l’AI Week, nous plaçons la province sous le feu des projecteurs mondiaux et accueillons la communauté mondiale de l’IA pour réaliser ce que beaucoup dans le domaine savent depuis longtemps : l’Alberta est à l’avant-garde de la révolution de l’IA. L’AI Week n’est pas seulement une célébration de 20 ans d’excellence en matière d’IA, c’est un point de lancement pour les 20 prochaines années de progrès. »

Tout le monde trouvera son bonheur à l’AI Week, avec notamment des sessions, des événements de réseautage et des événements sociaux pour tout une gamme d’âges et de familiarité avec l’IA. Des discours liminaires supplémentaires seront prononcés par Alona Fyshe, qui parlera de ce que le cerveau et l’IA peuvent nous dire l’un sur l’autre, et par Martha White, qui fera une présentation sur les applications innovantes de l’apprentissage par renforcement. Un discours spécial sur l’IA dans la santé mettra en évidence le travail de Dornoosh Zonoobi et Jacob Jaremko de Medo.ai, qui utilise l’apprentissage automatique de concert avec la technologie à ultrasons pour détecter la dysplasie de la hanche chez les nourrissons.

Des événements sociaux et de réseautage informels aideront à établir des liens entre les membres des communautés de la recherche, de l’industrie et de l’innovation, ainsi qu’entre les débutants et les passionnés d’IA. Pendant ce temps, la fête de rue Amiiversary, organisée sur Rice Howard Way dans le centre-ville d’Edmonton, marquera 20 ans d’excellence en matière d’IA en Alberta. Cette fête comptera la participation des personnalités les plus éminentes des scènes de l’innovation, de la technologie et de l’IA d’Edmonton.

La communauté internationale de l’IA participera à l’AI Week, avec plus de 500 candidats à des bourses de voyage de plus de 35 pays différents. Les candidats retenus, chercheurs émergents comme professionnels du secteur, auront l’opportunité d’apprendre aux côtés de leaders dans le domaine à l’occasion du symposium universitaire de l’AI Week, organisé par les membres de l’Amii de l’université de l’Alberta, l’un des meilleurs établissements universitaires au monde pour la recherche sur l’IA. Ce symposium comprendra des discussions et débats entre les plus grands experts de l’IA et de l’apprentissage automatique, ainsi que des démonstrations et des expositions en laboratoire de la communauté de l’Amii.

« J’ai choisi de m’installer au Canada en 2003 car à l’époque, l’Alberta était l’un des rares endroits à investir dans l’établissement d’une communauté de chercheurs en IA », a déclaré Richard S. Sutton, conseiller scientifique en chef de l’Amii, qui est également professeur à l’université de l’Alberta et scientifique de recherche distingué chez DeepMind. « Près de vingt ans plus tard, je suis frappé par tout ce que nous avons accompli pour faire progresser le domaine de l’IA, non seulement au niveau local mais aussi mondial. L’AI Week est l’occasion de célébrer ces réalisations et de présenter certains des esprits les plus brillants de l’IA. »

L’événement est organisé par l’Amii, l’un des instituts canadiens d’IA dans le cadre de la stratégie pancanadienne en matière d’IA, et comprendra des partenaires événementiels et des événements communautaires de l’ensemble de l’écosystème canadien de l’IA. L’AI Week est rendue possible en partie par nos partenaires événementiels et sponsors de bourses de talents : AltaMLApplied Pharmaceutical InnovationATBAttaboticsBDCCBRECIFARDeepMindDrugBankExplore EdmontonNeuroSophRBC Royal BankSamdeskTELUS et l’université de l’Alberta.

À propos de l’Amii

L’un des trois centres d’excellence en matière d’IA du Canada dans le cadre de la stratégie pancanadienne en matière d’IA, l’Amii (Alberta Machine Intelligence Institute) est un institut à but non lucratif basé en Alberta qui soutient la recherche de premier plan dans le domaine de l’intelligence artificielle et de l’apprentissage automatique et traduit les progrès scientifiques en adoption de l’industrie. L’Amii développe ses capacités en matière d’IA en faisant progresser la recherche de pointe, en proposant des offres éducatives exceptionnelles et en fournissant des conseils commerciaux, le tout dans le but de développer ses capacités internes en matière d’IA. Pour tout complément d’information, veuillez consulter le site amii.ca.

Spencer Murray
Communications et relations publiques
Fixe : 587.415.6100 ext. 109 | Mobile : 780.991.7136
spencer.murray@amii.ca

A AI Week reúne a comunidade mundial de IA

Quatro dias de eventos com palestras de líderes em IA e aprendizado de máquina

EDMONTON, Alberta, April 16, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — O Amii (Alberta Machine Intelligence Institute) divulgou o programa da AI Week, a ser realizada de 24 a 27 de maio em Edmonton, Canadá. Com mais de 20 eventos durante quatro dias espalhados por toda a cidade, a comemoração da excelência em IA de Alberta contará com uma palestra acadêmica de Richard S. Sutton, principal especialista em aprendizado de reforço, que discutirá futuras direções de pesquisa no campo.

A semana repleta de atividades também inclui painéis sobre as trajetórias da carreira de IA para crianças, IA para vantagem competitiva e a ética da IA; um mixer de carreira e talentos para a conexão dos candidatos à carreira de IA com as principais empresas; e um dia dedicado a um simpósio acadêmico com as mentes mais brilhantes em IA. Os eventos serão encerrados com uma festa em ‘casa’ em um local secreto a ser revelado em breve, e pela festa de rua do Amiiversary, marcando 20 anos de excelência em IA em Alberta. Saiba mais sobre o programa em www.ai-week.ca/program

“Nos últimos 20 anos, Alberta surgiu como um dos principais destinos do mundo para pesquisa e aplicação de IA”, disse Cam Linke, CEO do Amii. “A AI Week coloca um foco global em Alberta que irá receber de braços abertos a comunidade de IA de todo o mundo para que tenha a oportunidade de experimentar o que muitos no campo já sabem há muito tempo: que Alberta está na vanguarda da revolução da IA. A AI Week não é apenas uma comemoração dos 20 anos de excelência em IA – é o ponto de partida para os avanços nos próximos 20 anos.”

A AI Week é para todos, com sessões, eventos de networking e sociais para pessoas de todas as idades e nível de familiaridade com a IA. Alona Fyshe fará uma palestra especial sobre o que o Cérebro e a IA podem nos informar sobre eles, e Martha White fará uma apresentação sobre aplicações inovadoras de aprendizado de reforço. Uma palestra especial de IA em Saúde destacará o trabalho de Dornoosh Zonoobi e Jacob Jaremko, da Medo.ai, que usam o aprendizado de máquina em conjunto com a tecnologia de ultrassom para identificar bebês com displasia do quadril.

Eventos informais de networking e sociais ajudarão a criar conexões entre os membros das comunidades de pesquisa, indústria e inovação – bem como os iniciantes e entusiastas da IA. Enquanto isso, a festa de rua Amiiversary, realizada no Rice Howard Way, no centro de Edmonton, marcará 20 anos de excelência em IA em Alberta. A festa contará com a presença das principais figuras do cenário de IA, tecnologia e inovação de Edmonton.

A AI Week contará com a presença da comunidade de IA de todo o mundo, com mais de 500 candidatos a bolsas de viagem de mais de 35 países diferentes. Os candidatos aprovados, pesquisadores emergentes e profissionais da indústria terão a oportunidade de aprender ao lado de líderes no campo no AI Week Academic Symposium, que está sendo organizado pelos bolsistas do Amii da University of Alberta, uma das principais instituições acadêmicas do mundo em pesquisas de IA. O simpósio incluirá palestras e discussões entre os principais especialistas em IA e aprendizado de máquina, bem como demonstrações e apresentações de laboratório da comunidade Amii.

“Escolhi o Canadá em 2003 porque, na época, Alberta era um dos poucos lugares que investiam na criação de uma comunidade de pesquisadores em IA”, disse Richard S. Sutton, Conselheiro Científico Chefe da Amii, que também é professor da University of Alberta e um cientista de pesquisa distinto da DeepMind. “Quase vinte anos depois, fiquei impressionado com o quanto conseguimos avançar no campo da IA, não apenas aqui, mas em todo o mundo. Na AI Week poderemos comemorar essas conquistas e apresentar algumas das mentes mais brilhantes da IA.”

O evento está sendo organizado pela Amii, um dos institutos de IA do Canadá na Pan-Canadian AI Strategy e contará com parceiros de eventos e eventos liderados pela comunidade de todo o ecossistema de IA do Canadá. A AI Week é patrocinada em parte pelos nossos parceiros de eventos e patrocinadores de bolsas de talentos: AltaML, Applied Pharmaceutical Innovation, ATB, Attabotics, BDC, CBRE, CIFAR, DeepMind, DrugBank, Explore Edmonton, NeuroSoph, RBC Royal Bank, Samdesk, TELUS e University of Alberta.

Sobre o Amii

Um dos três centros de excelência em IA do Canadá e parte da Estratégia Pan-Canadense de IA, o Amii (Instituto de Inteligência de Máquinas de Alberta) é um instituto sem fins lucrativos com sede em Alberta que apoia a pesquisa líder mundial em inteligência artificial e aprendizado de máquina e traduz o avanço científico para a adoção da indústria. O Amii aumenta as capacidades de IA através de pesquisas avançadas, com ofertas educacionais excepcionais e consultoria para empresas – com o objetivo de desenvolver recursos internos de IA. Para mais informação, visite amii.ca.

Spencer Murray
Comunicações e Relações Públicas
t: 587.415.6100 ramal 109 | c: 780.991.7136
spencer.murray@amii.ca

Hong Kong Residents Report Increased Pressures from COVID Policies

Unpredictable local COVID-19 policies combined with China’s zero-pandemic approach to the coronavirus are taking a toll in Hong Kong, where residents and others say they are feeling increased pressures during the pandemic’s worst wave.

Reports of dead bodies filling hospital rooms, old people on beds outside hospitals in winter rain, long lines in freezing cold for mandatory PCR tests and complaints of neglect in government quarantine facilities have been in newspaper headlines in the last three months.

The city recorded the highest COVID death rate across the globe in early March, and residents witnessed the highest dissatisfaction rate with the government since the pandemic began.

Lack of support

One Hong Kong resident, requesting anonymity, was among those experiencing weeks of stress during the omicron wave. The 28-year-old’s mother started coughing in late February, and soon tested positive with at-home test kits.

At the time, the government only recognized COVID tests conducted in designated testing stations, which struggled to cope with explosive demand.

“My mother wanted to go to the stations for a test, but she was refused due to her symptoms. And there were so many people lining up – seriously even if I wasn’t infected, I probably would have contracted the virus if I had to line up like that,” the education worker told VOA.

Doctors at private clinics refused to see her mother because of her COVID symptoms. Then she went to the hospital to be told she would be better off going home as she would have to wait for over 10 hours if she stayed.

“My mother was extremely anxious at the time, and we didn’t know what to do since we didn’t know how bad it could get. We tried calling the government hotline for more support, but no one picked up. I couldn’t sleep for a few nights,” she said.

The daughter tested positive a few days later using the at-home test but given the reported conditions in quarantine facilities – including unpalatable food, negligence and shared toilets – she did not to report her test result to authorities to avoid being sent to one.

Inconsistent policies

On February 18, Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam announced a citywide testing plan under its zero-COVID approach to single out the confirmed patients and send some to quarantine facilities. At the time, she said a lockdown would not “go hand in hand” with the citywide testing.

Ten days later, Health Secretary Sophia Chan told public broadcaster RTHK that the city would not rule out a lockdown along with mass testing. That statement fueled fears among Hong Kongers, who were seen emptying supermarket pharmacy shelves in preparation.

A day later, Lam urged people to stay calm and not to believe in “rumors” of a lockdown, despite Chan’s comments. Eight days later, Lam said the city would drop citywide testing – which had been supposed to launch in March – as a priority.

Starting April 21, dining in in restaurants will resume, and recreational venues, including gyms, cinemas and theme parks will reopen.

Another Hong Kong resident, who wished to stay anonymous, told VOA she did not report testing positive to the government because of “mercurial” policies.

“I can’t even begin – they [the government] didn’t have any organizational skills. Their measures are mercurial, so residents don’t know how to adapt. When I was sick, I couldn’t get my hands on any medication because by that point, people already stocked up a lot [during panic buying]. I was worried that my symptoms could be very serious,” she said.

Financial and mental strains

Hong Kong residents fear losing their jobs due to mandatory quarantine, Benjamin Cowling, division head of epidemiology and biostatistics at the University of Hong Kong, told VOA in an email.

“A lot of people could be uneasy about the idea of being locked inside a relatively small room for an unknown amount of time, and separated from their family members and pets. Some people have lost their jobs as a result of being isolated, because if they don’t show up to work, they will be replaced,” Cowling said.

The head of Soulgood, a local online counseling platform, told VOA the demand for counseling services jumped tenfold in the last three months.

“Mental stress has definitely increased in the past year due to COVID as there is more stress related to COVID policies…Main symptoms of this group were isolation, anxiety and depression,” Ben Cheung, CEO of the platform, wrote in an email.

More than 65,000 people applied for the government’s unemployment relief plan for COVID on the first day it was open, according to a government statement in late March.

A separate local survey revealed that that two-thirds of Hong Kongers would see their household income affected if they are restricted from going out during the citywide testing, and half think that they would be infected when getting their specimens collected at the testing station.

The survey also indicated that close to half of Hong Kongers do not support policies requiring confirmed patients to quarantine at government designated facilities.

Zero-COVID approach

Hong Kong cannot make the final decision on its COVID policies, according to Alfred Wu, assistant professor at the National University of Singapore specializing in governance in the Greater China region.

“It is clear that Beijing makes the final decision. … China thinks zero-COVID policy works, and so every city should try to implement that, including Hong Kong. The Hong Kong government knows they have to listen to Beijing, even when many people and businesses are opposed to stringent restrictions,” Wu told VOA by phone.

A zero-COVID approach is likely only effective when the population is mostly vaccinated, according to Dr. Peter Collignon, an infectious diseases physician and microbiologist at the Canberra Hospital in Australia.

“Policies that keep covid at low levels or at zero levels are a good idea initially while you get you population vaccinated,” Collignon told VOA in an email.

Hong Kong’s elderly have been hit the hardest by the Omicron wave, with people aged over 80 witnessing the highest number of deaths. This group also saw the lowest vaccination rate – below 60%.

“The biggest mistake in Hong Kong was to presume they [the government] could maintain zero COVID but more importantly, not to ensure that those most likely to die from COVID when it inevitably entered Hong Kong and spread widely, the elderly, were vaccinated. Hence why the death toll in HK is so high per capita compared to other countries who also had low levels or zero covid before,” Collignon added.

Source: Voice of America

Malawi Police Accused of Hacking Website of Investigative Media Group

The Media Institute of Southern Africa in Malawi (MISA-Malawi), a watchdog group, has accused the Malawi Police Service of hacking a website for the Platform for Investigative Journalism. The accusation comes after the media organization said Thursday that its website was compromised. Police have denied the allegation, saying the group lacks evidence.

The website hacking came more than a week after police arrested the managing director for the Platform for Investigative Journalism, Gregory Gondwe. They wanted to find out where and how he obtained documents he used in a story about corruption involving government authorities.

Police could not get Gondwe to reveal the information; however, they did confiscate a mobile phone and laptop belonging to him and forced him to reveal passwords.

Gondwe was unconditionally released four hours later due to international pressure, largely from the U.S. and British embassies in Malawi. Police returned his equipment a day later.

In a statement, the Media Institute of Southern Africa in Malawi (MISA-Malawi), a watchdog organization, says it believes the hacking was intentional and cannot rule out the involvement of state agents, considering the circumstances.

Teresa Ndanga, the chairperson for MISA-Malawi, spoke to VOA via a messaging application.

“This hacking incident happened a few days after the managing director of the Platform was arrested, his gadgets seized and was forced to hand over his passwords. So, they essentially had access to everything that Gregory has – his private life, his work life and everything else. And that coincidence in itself is conviction enough on our part to conclude or to suspect that police are involved,” she said.

Ndanga says it is concerning that police officers who must be in the forefront in combating cybersecurity crimes have been linked to actions that qualify them as prime suspects.

Hacking is a crime in Malawi under the Electronic Transactions and Cyber Security Act of 2016. Offenders face fines and seven years’ imprisonment.

MISA-Malawi has therefore asked the government to investigate and prosecute anyone suspected in this incident.

Harry Namwaza, deputy spokesperson for the Malawi Police Service, told VOA via a messaging app that MISA-Malawi’s allegation lacks evidence.

“Actually as police, you actually know that we have a mandate to summon any person we feel that will be important in our inquiries and the investigation was legally binding. So, this is why we are saying basing the accusation on that, is not substantial in terms of evidence,” he said.

Namwaza said the investigation of Gondwe is still ongoing.

“Interrogating him was one of the stages of our investigations we are conducting because he is one of the people we know that can help in the investigations. But it has nothing to do with the hacking.”

Namwaza says police have yet to start investigating the hacking incident because they have not received a complaint from the Platform for Investigative Journalism.

Gregory Gondwe says his group is still assessing what happened.

“We haven’t complained because we are looking at what has been happening,” he said. “The police, to us, are the main suspects because of what has led to the hacking. The first was the arrest, the confiscation of the IT gadgets, and the hacking of our website. How do you expect me to go to the same police, and lodge a complaint?”

Gondwe says, so far, his media organization has engaged independent IT experts to help track down the hackers.

Security analyst Sheriff Kaisi says police should work with other organizations like the Malawi Communications Regulatory Authority to assist in tracking and arresting the hackers if it wants to come out in the clear.

Source: Voice of America