Skip to content
GCC AI Research

Search

Results for "Chun-Ho Lin"

Chun-Ho Lin wins best paper award

KAUST ·

KAUST Discovery Ph.D. student Chun-Ho Lin received the best paper award at the 2nd International Symposium on Devices and Application of Two-dimensional Materials in June 2016. The award recognizes Lin's contributions to the field of two-dimensional materials. Why it matters: Recognition of KAUST student research highlights the university's contributions to advanced materials science.

ML Systems For Many

MBZUAI ·

Qirong Ho, co-founder and CTO of Petuum Inc., will be contributing to the "ML Systems for Many" initiative. Petuum is recognized for creating standardized building blocks for AI assembly. Ho also holds a Ph.D. from Carnegie Mellon University and is part of the CASL open-source consortium. Why it matters: Showcases the ongoing efforts to democratize AI development and deployment, making it more accessible and sustainable, although the specific initiative is not further detailed.

On Optimizing Mobile Memory, Storage, and Beyond

MBZUAI ·

Prof. Chun Jason Xue from the City University of Hong Kong presented research on optimizing mobile memory and storage by analyzing mobile application characteristics, noting their differences from server applications. The research explores system software designs inherited from the Linux kernel and identifies optimization opportunities in mobile memory and storage management. Xue's work aims to enhance user experience on mobile devices through mobile application characterization, focusing on non-volatile and flash memories. Why it matters: Optimizing mobile systems based on the unique characteristics of mobile applications can significantly improve device performance and user experience in the region.

Lin provides critical insights at SIGIR 2023

MBZUAI ·

MBZUAI Professor Chih-Jen Lin gave a keynote at the 46th International ACM SIGIR Conference on Research and Development in Information Retrieval in Taipei. Lin's address, titled ‘On the “Rough Use” of Machine Learning Techniques’, focused on instances where machine learning techniques are employed inappropriately, using examples from graph representation learning and deep neural networks. He advocated for the development of high-quality, user-friendly software to improve the practical application of machine learning and mitigate misuse. Why it matters: Showcases MBZUAI's faculty expertise and contributions to the discussion on responsible AI research and deployment on a global stage.

Mass production of AI solutions

MBZUAI ·

MBZUAI Assistant Professor Qirong Ho is researching AI operating systems to standardize algorithms and enable non-experts to create AI applications reliably. He emphasizes that countries mastering mass production of AI systems will benefit most from the Fourth Industrial Revolution. Ho is co-founder and CTO at Petuum Inc., an AI startup creating standardized building blocks for affordable and scalable AI production. Why it matters: This research aims to democratize AI development and promote widespread adoption across industries in the UAE and beyond.

Key Research in Embodied AI

MBZUAI ·

Dr. Hao Dong from Peking University presented research on addressing the challenge of limited large-scale training data in embodied AI, particularly for manipulation, task planning, and navigation. The presentation covered simulation learning and large models. Dr. Dong is a chief scientist of China's National Key Research and Development Program and an area chair/associate editor for NeurIPS, CVPR, AAAI, and ICRA. Why it matters: Overcoming data scarcity is crucial for advancing embodied AI research and enabling more sophisticated robotic applications in the region.

Sustainable AI at scale

MBZUAI ·

MBZUAI is developing the AI Operating System (AIOS) to reduce the energy, time, and talent costs of AI computing. AIOS aims to make AI models smaller, faster, and more efficient, reducing reliance on expensive hardware and speeding up compute operations. It also enables cost-aware model tuning and standardizes AI modules for reliable operation. Why it matters: By addressing the environmental impact and resource demands of AI, AIOS could promote more sustainable and accessible AI development in the region and globally.

Short course on the development of open-source machine learning packages

MBZUAI ·

MBZUAI is hosting a short course on developing open-source machine learning packages. The course will be led by Chih-Jen Lin, an affiliated professor at MBZUAI and distinguished professor at National Taiwan University, who has developed widely used ML packages like LIBSVM and LibMultiLabel. The course will cover topics such as starting a project, choosing functionalities, and identifying research problems from user feedback. Why it matters: This course can help improve the quality and usability of open-source machine learning tools coming from the region's research institutions.