This article discusses distribution shifts in machine learning and the use of importance weighting methods to address them. Masashi Sugiyama from the University of Tokyo and RIKEN AIP presented recent advances in importance-based distribution shift adaptation methods. The talk covered joint importance-predictor estimation, dynamic importance weighting, and multistep class prior shift adaptation. Why it matters: Understanding and mitigating distribution shifts is crucial for deploying robust and reliable AI models in real-world scenarios within the GCC region and beyond.
Mausam, head of Yardi School of AI at IIT Delhi and affiliate professor at University of Washington, will discuss Neuro-Symbolic AI. The talk will cover recent research threads with applications in NLP, probabilistic decision-making, and constraint satisfaction. Mausam's research explores neuro-symbolic machine learning, computer vision for radiology, NLP for robotics, multilingual NLP, and intelligent information systems. Why it matters: Neuro-Symbolic AI is gaining importance as it combines the strengths of neural and symbolic approaches, potentially leading to more robust and explainable AI systems.
The Symposium on Data Mining and Applications (SDMA 2014) was organized by MEGDAM to foster collaboration among data mining and machine learning researchers in Saudi Arabia, GCC countries, and the Middle East. The symposium covered areas such as statistics, computational intelligence, pattern recognition, databases, Big Data Mining and visualization. Acceptance was based on originality, significance and quality of contribution.
KAUST Professor Takashi Gojobori has been elected as a Fellow of the International Society for Computational Biology (ISCB). ISCB is a scholarly society for computational biology and bioinformatics. Gojobori's research interests include comparative genomics and gene expression of neural cells, as well as the marine metagenomics of microorganisms. Why it matters: The recognition highlights KAUST's contributions to computational biology and bioinformatics and strengthens its position as a research hub in the region.
Fudan University's Zhongyu Wei presented research on social simulation driven by LLMs, covering individual and large-scale social movement simulation. Wei directs the Data Intelligence and Social Computing Lab (Fudan DISC) and has published extensively on multimodal large models and social computing. His work includes the Volcano multimodal model, DISC-MedLLM, and ElectionSim. Why it matters: Using LLMs for social simulation could provide new tools for understanding and potentially predicting social dynamics in the Arab world.
Estelle Metayer, a public speaker and professor at McGill University, spoke at KAUST as part of the University’s 2017 Winter Enrichment Program. Her talk focused on the future of technology and science. The event took place in the University's Auditorium on January 18. Why it matters: Such events at KAUST contribute to knowledge dissemination and engagement with global experts on emerging technologies.
Nobuyuki Umetani from the University of Tokyo presented a talk on using AI to accelerate simulations and optimization for 3D shape designs. The talk covered interactive approaches integrating physical simulation into geometric modeling. Specific applications discussed included musical instruments, garment design, aerodynamic design, and floor plan design. Why it matters: This highlights growing interest in AI techniques at MBZUAI and across the GCC for streamlining engineering design and simulation processes.
The article discusses the rise of large language models like ChatGPT and Gemini. It highlights their role in driving the first wave of AI development. Why it matters: While lacking specifics, the article suggests ongoing interest in the impact and future of LLMs, a key area of AI research and development.