Archive for the ‘Ai’ Category

Google Cloud launches A.I.-powered tools to accelerate drug discovery, precision medicine – CNBC

A person walks next to the Google Cloud logo at the Mobile World Congress (MWC) in Barcelona, Spain February 27, 2023.

Nacho Doce | Reuters

Google Cloud on Tuesday launched two new AI-powered tools that aim to help biotech and pharmaceutical companies accelerate drug discovery and advance precision medicine.

One tool, called the Target and Lead Identification Suite, is designed to help companies predict and understand the structure of proteins, a fundamental part of drug development. Another, the Multiomics Suite, will help researchers ingest, store, analyze and share mass amounts of genomic data.

The new developments mark Googles latest advancement in the red-hot AI arms race, where tech companies are competing to dominate a market that analysts believe could someday be worth trillions. The company has faced pressure to showcase its generative artificial intelligence technology since the public release of OpenAIs ChatGPT late last year.

Google announced its generative chatbot Bard in February. Shares of its parent company Alphabet rose 4.3% last week after Google unveiled several AI advancements at its annual developer conference.

The two new Google Cloud suites help address a long-standing issue in the biopharma industry: the lengthy and costly process of bringing a new medicine to the U.S. market.

Drug companies can invest anywhere from a few hundred million dollars to more than $2 billion to launch a single drug, according to a recent Deloitte report. Their efforts arent always successful. Medicines that reach clinical trials have a 16% chance of being approved in the U.S., another Deloitte report says.

That hefty cost and bleak success rate is accompanied by an extensive and tedious research process that typically lasts about 10 to 15 years.

The new suites will save companies a statistically significant amount of time and money throughout the drug development process, said Shweta Maniar, Google Clouds global director of life sciences strategy and solutions. Google did not provide CNBC with specific figures.

We're helping organizations get medicines to the right people faster, Maniar told CNBC in an interview. I am personally very excited, this is something that myself and the team have been working on for a few years now.

Both suites are widely available to customers starting Tuesday. Google said the cost will vary depending on the company. Several businesses, including Big Pharma's Pfizer and the biotech companies Cerevel Therapeutics and Colossal Biosciences, have already been using the products.

The Target and Lead Identification Suite aims to streamline the first key step of drug development, which is identifying a biological target that researchers can focus on and design a treatment around, according to Maniar.

A biological target is most commonly a protein, an essential building block of diseases and all other parts of life. Finding that target involves identifying the structure of a protein, which determines its function, or the role it plays in a disease.

If you can understand the role, the protein structure and role, now you can start developing drugs around that, Maniar said.

But that process is time-consuming and often unsuccessful.

Scientists can take around 12 months just to identify a biological target, according to a widely followed guidance manual for drugmakers posted in a database run by the federal National Library of Medicine.The two techniques researchers traditionally use to determine protein structures also have a high rate of failure, according to Maniar.

She also said its difficult for traditional technologies to increase or decrease the amount of work they do based on demand.

Google Clouds suite has a three-pronged approach for making that process more efficient.

The suite allows scientists to ingest, share and manage molecular data on a protein using Google Clouds Analytics Hub, a platform that lets users securely exchange data across organizations.

Researchers can then use that data to predict the structure of a protein with AlphaFold2, a machine learning model developed by a subsidiary of Google.

AlphaFold2 runs on Googles Vertex AI pipeline, a platform that allows researchers to build and deploy machine learning models faster.

In minutes, AlphaFold2 can predict the 3D structure of a protein with more accuracy than traditional technologies and at the scale researchers need. Predicting that structure is critical because it can help researchers understand a proteins function in a disease.

The final component of Google Clouds suite helps researchers identify how the proteins structure interacts with different molecules. A molecule can become the basis for a new drug if it changes that proteins function and ultimately demonstrates the ability to treat the disease.

Researchers can use Google Cloud's high-performance computing resources to find the most promising molecules that could lead to the development of a new drug, according to a press release on the new tools. Those services provide the infrastructure companies need to accelerate, automate and scale up their work.

Cerevel, which focuses on developing treatments for neuroscience diseases, typically has to screen a large library of 3 million different molecules to find one that will produce a positive effect against a disease, according to Chief Scientific Officer John Renger. He called that process "complicated and involved and expensive."

But Renger said the company will be able to weed out molecules faster using Google Cloud's suite. Computers will take care of screening molecules and help Cerevel "get to an answer really quickly," he said.

Renger estimates Cerevel will save at least three years on average by using the suite to discover a new drug. He said it's difficult to estimate how much money the company will save, but emphasized that the suite cuts down on the resources and manual labor typically required to screen molecules.

"What it means is we can get there faster, get there cheaper and we can get to drugs to patients much more quickly without as many failures," he told CNBC.

Cerevel has been working with Google for more than a month to further understand the suite and determine how the company will use it. But Renger hopes Cerevel will "be at a place where we get some results" in the next month.

Google Clouds second solution, the Multiomics Suite, aims to help researchers tackle another daunting challenge: genomic data analysis.

Colossal Biosciences, a biotechnology company that aims to use DNA and genetic engineering to reverse extinction, has been using the Multiomics Suite in its research.

As a startup, Colossal did not have the internal infrastructure necessary to organize or decipher massive quantities of genomic data. One human genome sequence alone requires more than 200 gigabytes of storage, and researchers believe that they will need 40 exabytes to store the worlds genomic data by 2025, according to the National Human Genome Research Institute.

The institute estimates that five exabytes could store every word ever spoken by humans, so building the technology to support genomic data analysis is not a small task.

As such, the Multiomics Suite aims to provide companies like Colossal with the infrastructure they need to make sense of large amounts of data so they can spend more time focusing on new scientific discoveries.

If we had to do everything from scratch, I mean, that's the power of Google Cloud, right? Colossals vice president of strategy and computational sciences, Alexander Titus, told CNBC in an interview. We dont have to build that from scratch, so that definitely saves us time and money.

Researchers ability to sequence DNA has historically outpaced their ability to decipher and analyze it. But as technology has improved in recent years, genomic data has unlocked new insights into areas like the genetic variations associated with disease.

Google Clouds Maniar said it could ultimately aid in the development of more personalized drugs and treatments. In 2021 alone, two-thirds of drugs approved by the Food and Drug Administration were supported by human genetics research, according to a paper published in the journal Nature.

Maniar believes the Multiomics Suite will help encourage further innovation.

Ben Lamm, CEO of Colossal, said the Multiomics Suite is the reason the company has been able to carry out research on any reasonable timeline. Colossal started piloting Google's technology late last year, and as a result, Lamm said the company is on target to produce a woolly mammoth by 2028.

Without the Multiomics Suite, Lamm said he thinks the company would have been set back by over a decade.

We would not be anywhere near where we are today, he said.

Prior to using Google Clouds suite, much of Colossals data management was done manually using spreadsheets, Lamm said.

He said it would have been a massive burden on the company to try to build the more complex tools it needed for research.

We're no longer in small data when it comes to biology, said Colossals Titus. We're thinking on the scale of how do we get insights into 10,000, 20,000, 10 million years of evolutionary history? And those questions just aren't answered without scalable computing infrastructure and tools like cloud computing and Multiomics.

Correction: Scientists can take around 12 months just to identify a biological target, according to a widely followed guidance manual for drugmakers posted in a database run by the federal National Library of Medicine. An earlier version misstated the attribution.

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Google Cloud launches A.I.-powered tools to accelerate drug discovery, precision medicine - CNBC

Woodward and Bernstein: Watergate reporters warn of the limitations of AI – BBC

18 May 2023

Robert Woodward (left) and Carl Bernstein (right) spoke to the BBC's Amol Rajan

US reporter Carl Bernstein has warned that artificial intelligence (AI) is a "huge force" which poses challenges for the future of journalism.

AI's rapid take-up has sparked fears of job losses, privacy and the potential to circulate misleading information.

Bernstein said "truth is the bottom line for anything in your life."

In an interview with the BBC's Amol Rajan, Bernstein and Woodward also reflected on the fall of Nixon, the former presidency of Donald Trump and the state of the US and the world today.

Bernstein said: "We need to know what's real as opposed to what's false. The press is the essential element in a community of being able to attain that."

Asked why anyone should become a reporter today, he said to find "the best obtainable version of the truth".

Robert Woodward said political hate had become part of the United States

The Chat GPT programme, which uses AI, has become widely used in the past year and Rajan read them an excerpt that the tool had produced about the two veteran US journalists.

It briefly summarised who they were and said their work "had inspired a new generation of journalists and established a new standard for investigative reporting".

Bernstein said he wasn't enamoured by the extract and described it as "an amalgam of things that have been written about us".

He recognised part of it from a brochure used for the conference they had attended. Despite it being the early stages of artificial intelligence, he said: "AI is a huge force we're going to have to grapple with in this world."

Carl Bernstein described AI as a huge force to be grappled with.

Discussing the limitations of AI, Woodward said: "I can call the Pentagon and say, 'I'd like to talk to the chairman of the Joint Chiefs, the top military man', and he's either going to talk or maybe not. AI can't do that."

Amol Rajan interviews Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein, the two journalists at the heart of the Watergate scandal, about Nixon, Trump and America today.

Their Watergate story began with the two reporters carrying out traditional journalism, knocking on doors following a burglary, and ended by exposing the wrongdoing of President Nixon.

The pair are revered in US journalism for their award-winning reporting, and their book about Watergate was adapted for the big screen in All the President's Men.

The movie came out in 1976 and starred Robert Redford as Woodward and Dustin Hoffman as Bernstein.

Image source, Screen Archives

Dustin Hoffman and Robert Redford in All the President's Men

Bernstein drew a parallel between the dramatic events surrounding the resignation of President Nixon and those around the end of President Trump's time in office.

"We never thought we would see it with another president. It happened even more so and even more dangerously with Trump," he said.

This year, Rupert Murdoch's Fox News paid out nearly $800m (643m) over its reporting of the 2020 presidential election.

Murdoch owns many media outlets, including the Times, the Sun and the Wall Street Journal, as well as Fox News.

Bernstein and Woodward worked at the Washington Post

Asked whether Rupert Murdoch has been a force for good, Bernstein said: "Instead of being remembered for his imagination in terms of what he did with the movie business, with changing television shows like South Park, all of this has been overwhelmed by promoting, encouraging and accepting a culture of untruth that has been the hallmark of his journalism".

"I think in terms of his legacy, it is going to be evil because he has taken untruth and made it his imprimatur."

Woodward has written many books including ones on Bill Clinton, Barack Obama, Donald Trump and the CIA. Carl Bernstein, himself an author of five best-selling books, is a regular voice on US news programmes.

Amol Rajan interviews - Watergate to Trump will be broadcast at 19:00 BST on Thursday 18 May on BBC Two.

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Woodward and Bernstein: Watergate reporters warn of the limitations of AI - BBC

Amazon’s Alexa head says company is ‘at the forefront of A.I.’ as chatbots explode – CNBC

Senior VP Head Scientist of Amazon Alexa, Rohit Prasad in Lisbon.

Rita Franca | Nurphoto | Getty Images

Amazon's Alexa head said his company is right in the middle of the boom in generative artificial intelligence, the technology that's spreading rapidly across Silicon Valley and has spurred an arms race between Microsoft and Google.

The tech world has been enamored with a new generation of chatbots since OpenAI's ChatGPT went viral late last year. That's pressured companies like Amazon to showcase their own capabilities in generative AI. Amazon's biggest entry into the market thus far has been through an AI service for cloud customers.

However, Rohit Prasad, Amazon's senior vice president and head scientist for Alexa, said it's wrong to think the e-retailer has missed out in generative AI, which allows people to convert text-based queries into creative and thorough answers.

"Alexa has been and is at the forefront of AI for a long time," Prasad told CNBC in an interview. "We've been part of the cultural zeitgeist and it hasn't slowed down."

Prasad added that contrary to ChatGPT, which remains accessible through a web browser, Alexa is an "instantly available, personal AI" that people can communicate with by voice.

Amazon established an early lead in voice software after it debuted its Alexa digital assistant in 2014. More than 500 million Alexa-powered devices have been sold worldwide, the company said Wednesday. The last time Amazon gave an update on that number was in 2019, when it was at 100 million.

The Alexa assistant, now plugged into everything from smart speakers to thermostats, has long depended on machine learning technology to answer their queries by fetching relevant data.

But the rise of AI-powered chatbots, which can perform sophisticated functions like writing fiction and coding software, has highlighted the limitations of digital assistants such as Alexa. Amazon founder Jeff Bezos' sci-fi vision for Alexa to resemble an all-knowing computer from "Star Trek" hasn't exactly panned out.

Prasad said Amazon is working to make Alexa more conversational and intelligent. One way it hopes to do so is through a new version of its own large language model, called Alexa Teacher Model. Large language models power generative AI, and Alexa is already powered by Amazon's LLM.

The goal is for Alexa to be able to answer complex requests, and understand more about users.

"This is where all the ambient context of who you are, what are you asking, where you are, comes in to make the best decision for you in that moment and on your behalf," Prasad said.

In his latest letter to investors, Amazon CEO Andy Jassy said generative AI and LLMs are areas where the company is "investing heavily," noting that the technologies stand to "transform and improve virtually every customer experience."

The company has posted job listings suggesting it plans to implement a ChatGPT-style product in search on its online store, Bloomberg reported. Amazon may also add more generative AI-like features to Alexa focused on entertainment and storytelling, according to Insider.

WATCH: Amazon's smart home dominance and how it could grow with iRobot acquisition

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Amazon's Alexa head says company is 'at the forefront of A.I.' as chatbots explode - CNBC

ServiceNow and NVIDIA Announce Partnership to Build Generative … – NVIDIA Blog

Built on ServiceNow Platform With NVIDIA AI Software and DGX Infrastructure, Custom Large Language Models to Bring Intelligent Workflow Automation to Enterprises

Knowledge 2023ServiceNow and NVIDIA today announced a partnership to develop powerful, enterprise-grade generative AI capabilities that can transform business processes with faster, more intelligent workflow automation.

Using NVIDIA software, services and accelerated infrastructure, ServiceNow is developing custom large language models trained on data specifically for its ServiceNow Platform, the intelligent platform for end-to-end digital transformation.

This will expand ServiceNows already extensive AI functionality with new uses for generative AI across the enterprise including for IT departments, customer service teams, employees and developers to strengthen workflow automation and rapidly increase productivity.

ServiceNow is also helping NVIDIA streamline its IT operations with these generative AI tools, using NVIDIA data to customize NVIDIA NeMo foundation models running on hybrid-cloud infrastructure consisting of NVIDIA DGX Cloud and on-premises NVIDIA DGX SuperPOD AI supercomputers.

IT is the nervous system of every modern enterprise in every industry, said Jensen Huang, founder and CEO of NVIDIA. Our collaboration to build super-specialized generative AI for enterprises will boost the capability and productivity of IT professionals worldwide using the ServiceNow platform.

As adoption of generative AI continues to accelerate, organizations are turning to trusted vendors with battle-tested, secure AI capabilities to boost productivity, gain a competitive edge, and keep data and IP secure, said CJ Desai, president and chief operating officer of ServiceNow. Together, NVIDIA and ServiceNow will help drive new levels of automation to fuel productivity and maximize business impact."

Harnessing Generative AI to Reshape Digital BusinessServiceNow and NVIDIA are exploring a number of generative AI use cases to simplify and improve productivity across the enterprise by providing high accuracy and higher value in IT.

This includes developing intelligent virtual assistants and agents to help quickly resolve a broad range of user questions and support requests with purpose-built AI chatbots that use large language models and focus on defined IT tasks.

To simplify the user experience, enterprises can customize chatbots with proprietary data to create a central generative AI resource that stays on topic while resolving many different requests.

These generative AI use cases are also applicable to customer service agents, allowing for case prioritization with greater accuracy, saving time and improving outcomes. Customer service teams can use generative AI for automatic issue resolution, knowledge-base article generation based on customer case summaries, and chat summarization for faster hand-off, resolution and wrap-up.

In addition, generative AI can improve the employee experience by helping identify growth opportunities. For example, delivering customized learning and development recommendations, like courses and mentors, based on natural language queries and information from an employees profile.

Full-Stack NVIDIA Generative AI Software and Infrastructure Fuel Rapid DevelopmentIn its generative AI research and development, ServiceNow is using NVIDIA AI Foundations cloud services and the NVIDIA AI Enterprise software platform, which includes the NVIDIA NeMo framework.

Included in NeMo are prompt tuning, supervised fine-tuning and knowledge retrieval tools to help developers build, customize and deploy language models for enterprise use cases. NeMo Guardrails software is also included and enables developers to easily add topical, safety and security features for AI chatbots.

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ServiceNow and NVIDIA Announce Partnership to Build Generative ... - NVIDIA Blog

Artificial intelligence: Revealed – how many firms are already using AI… and how workers feel about it – Sky News

By Sarah Taaffe-Maguire, Business reporter @taaffems

Friday 19 May 2023 04:17, UK

Employees are more fearful and distrustful of artificial intelligence in the workplace than their employers - as businesses see cost savings as the main benefit of the technology.

A UK-wide survey of attitudes and preparedness for AI, by recruitment giant Hays, found close to a third of employees say they don't have the right skills to make best use of the technology - but firms have already begun adopting it.

Some 56% of employers think AI should be embraced in the workplace, while just 8% said it should be feared.

Read more: AI to hit workplace 'like a freight train'

But among employees, just 49% believe artificial intelligence should be adopted - with 13% concerned about its impact.

Currently, 21% of organisations say they are already using AI tools like ChatGPT - and 27% are investing in training for staff to upskill in AI tools and technologies.

The main benefits of AI - identified by employers - were cost savings, process efficiencies and improved productivity.

At the same time, 55% of workers say their employer isn't helping them prepare for the use of AI at work.

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The survey indicates that more companies will adopt AI - and just 18% say they intend to ban it, with 3% already prohibiting its use.

The majority - 66% - say they will allow the technology in their workplace but will monitor how it is used.

The greatest take up of AI, according to the survey, was in marketing.

Over a third (37%) of marketing professionals say they have used an AI tool in their current role. They were followed by 30% of professionals working in tech, 23% of professionals working in architecture and 17% of those working in sales.

For businesses not using AI, the top reason listed was a lack of awareness or understanding of the benefits.

The survey results follow the announcement by BT that 55,000 jobs are to be cut before 2030 with AI replacing 10,000 roles.

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BT has revealed plans to significantly reduce the number of people working for the telecoms group as part of efforts to cut costs and bolster profitability, with AI due to replace thousands of roles. The company said it hoped the roles would be lost through natural attrition rather than redundancy.

The telecoms company added it would use AI to deliver better customer service and capture other business opportunities.

Unions have also expressed concern for workers' rights with the expansion of AI into the workplace and have called for tighter regulation.

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Artificial intelligence: Revealed - how many firms are already using AI... and how workers feel about it - Sky News