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| Google said it was developing ways to use artificial in tracking whales as part of efforts to protect endangered species (AFP Photo/Olivier MORIN) |
San Francisco (AFP) - Google on Tuesday provided a look at efforts to put artificial intelligence to use for good, from protecting whales to breaking language barriers.
The
internet giant unveiled projects on AI work teams a week after Google chief
executive Sundar Pichai urged a "proportional approach" to regulating
the technology.
Among
demonstrations on Tuesday was a "bioacoustics" project using AI to
help scientists, governments and nonprofit groups track endangered species.
Two years
ago, Google partnered with the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Adminstration to track humpback whales by using AI recognize the sound of
whales in audio captured by underwater microphones.
Google on
Tuesday announced an alliance with environmental groups to track critically
endangered killer whales in the Salish Sea using AI.
"We
trained a deep neural network that automatically and immediately detects orcas
and sends alerts to Canadian harbor managers," Google said.
Another AI
team showed how Google translation software that already lets smartphones serve
as interpreters is being enhanced to power a new feature to transcribe what is
being said in real time and provide the results in text.
"With
this, your Android mobile phone will effectively turn into an almost real time
translator device for long-form speech," Google said.
Google's AI
endeavors include infusing cords, headphone cables, clothing drawstrings or
other textiles with gesture-sensing capabilities that could allow electronic
devices to be controlled with squeezes or twists.
Google
engineers are also exploring using AI to help with medical diagnostics, such as
detecting signs of cancer or eye disease in scans.
Pichai,
also boss of Google's parent company Alphabet, argued before an audience at a
Brussels think tank, Bruegel, that companies like his own -- an internet
behemoth valued at $1 trillion -- need to be given a say as governments
formulate AI regulatory policy.
AI is seen
as an area where developments and applications risk outpacing regulatory
measures unless authorities act swiftly.
"There
is no question in my mind that artificial intelligence needs to be
regulated," Pichai said, while stressing that Google wants "to offer
our expertise, experience, and tools as we grapple with the inevitable tensions
and trade-offs."

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