Singapore
Singapore was one of the first countries to announce a national strategy, called AI Singapore, in May 2017. The initiative brings the government, research institutions and companies together to collaborate on research and speed up local adoption of A.I., with $109 million to spend over five years. Singapore also has a head start in autonomous vehicles: It had the first self-driving taxis for use by the public and built a mini-town for further testing.
United Arab Emirates
The United Arab Emirates is the first country in the Middle East to publish an A.I. strategy, and the only country in the world to create a Ministry of Artificial Intelligence. While the Emiratis are trying to attract international attention with bold projects like an A.I.-powered lab focused on climate change, this summer they taught 600 local students at an A.I. camp to develop their own talent pool.
Israel
Israel is becoming a world leader in medical A.I. with dozens of new health care start-ups in a country that has a population just shy of New Jersey’s. The government announced a five-year program with a budget of $280 million to digitise patient data and use A.I. to gather important insights, with hopes of turning the homegrown expertise into consumer products that could make Israel an industry leader.
India
India released its AI strategy only this summer, but it contains a big idea that could catch them up: become the “garage” that develops AI that creates economic growth and social development for themselves and the rest of the developing world. The plan, which they are calling #AIforAll, will focus on projects around health care, agriculture, education, smart cities and infrastructure, and smart mobility and transportation.
France
The French government released a 150-page document earlier this year that spells out its AI efforts around the health, environment, transportation and security sectors, and is putting $2 billion into funding projects around those areas. And when (or if) Britain leaves the European Union, France is well placed to be the union’s epicentre of AI. Both Google and Facebook already have offices in Paris dedicated to AI research.
Canada
Two of the four “godfathers” of the current AI boom, Yoshua Bengio and Geoffrey Hinton, live, work, and teach in Canada. Their efforts have helped spur major research and an AI industry there, including offices for Uber, Facebook and Google. The current immigration restrictions in the United States have also sent talented international researchers to Canada instead of Silicon Valley.
©2018 The New York Times News Service
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