Skip to content
GCC AI Research

Search

Results for "AI trends"

Foundations of Multisensory Artificial Intelligence

MBZUAI ·

Paul Liang from CMU presented on machine learning foundations for multisensory AI, discussing a theoretical framework for modality interactions. The talk covered cross-modal attention and multimodal transformer architectures, and applications in mental health, pathology, and robotics. Liang's research aims to enable AI systems to integrate and learn from diverse real-world sensory modalities. Why it matters: This highlights the growing importance of multimodal AI research and its potential for advancements across various sectors in the region, including healthcare and robotics.

Evolution of Artificial Intelligence: Past, Current and Future

MBZUAI ·

Dr. Munawar Hayat from Monash University gave a talk on the history of AI, recent breakthroughs in deep learning, and future research directions. The talk covered computer vision, NLP, autonomous driving, and reinforcement learning. Dr. Hayat also discussed the limitations of AI and challenges in the field. Why it matters: This lecture helps contextualize the rapid progress of AI for students in the region.

Machine Learning Integration for Signal Processing

TII ·

Technology Innovation Institute's (TII) Directed Energy Research Center (DERC) is integrating machine learning (ML) techniques into signal processing to accelerate research. One project used convolutional neural networks to predict COVID-19 pneumonia from chest x-rays with 97.5% accuracy. DERC researchers also demonstrated that ML-based signal and image processing can retrieve up to 68% of text information from electromagnetic emanations. Why it matters: This adoption of ML for signal processing at TII highlights the potential for advanced AI techniques to enhance research and security applications in the UAE.

Bruteforce computing is the next “winter of AI”

MBZUAI ·

Prof. Mérouane Debbah of the Technology Innovation Institute (TII) warns that current AI development relies on unsustainable, energy-intensive "bruteforce computing." He argues that the field needs more energy-efficient algorithms instead of simply scaling up GPUs. Debbah suggests neuromorphic computing as a potential solution, drawing inspiration from the human brain's energy efficiency. Why it matters: This critique highlights a crucial sustainability challenge for AI in the GCC and globally, as the region invests heavily in compute-intensive AI models.