Muhammad Shafique from NYU Abu Dhabi discusses building energy-efficient and robust EdgeAI systems. The talk covers trends, challenges, and techniques for optimizing software and hardware stacks. These optimizations aim to enable embodied AI in autonomous systems, IoT-Healthcare, Industrial-IoT, and smart environments. Why it matters: The research addresses key challenges in deploying AI on resource-constrained edge devices in the GCC region, particularly regarding energy efficiency and security.
MBZUAI Assistant Professors Bin Gu and Huan Xiong are advancing spiking neural networks (SNNs) to improve computational power and energy efficiency. They will present their latest research on SNNs at the 38th Annual AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence in Vancouver. SNNs process information in discrete events, mimicking biological neurons and offering improved energy efficiency compared to traditional neural networks. Why it matters: This research could enable running advanced AI applications like GPTs on mobile devices, unlocking their full potential due to the energy efficiency of SNNs.
MBZUAI researchers developed Mobile-VideoGPT, a compact and efficient multimodal model for real-time video understanding on edge devices. The system uses keyframe selection, efficient token projection, and a Qwen-2.5-0.5B language model. Testing showed that Mobile-VideoGPT is faster and performs better than other models while being significantly smaller, and the model and code are publicly available. Why it matters: This research enables on-device AI processing for video, reducing reliance on remote servers and addressing privacy concerns, which can accelerate the adoption of AI in mobile and embedded applications.
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.
Yanwei Fu from Fudan University will present research on multimodal models, robotic grasping, and fMRI neural decoding. Topics include few-shot learning, object-centered self-supervised learning, image manipulation, and visual-language alignment. The research also covers Transformer compression and applications of large models with MVS 3D modeling in robotic arm grasping. Why it matters: While the talk is not directly about Middle East AI, the topics covered are core to advancing AI research and applications in the region.