The Convergence of Machine Learning and Artificial Intelligence Towards Enabling Autonomous Driving

Speaker: Amnon Shashua , Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Mobileye

Date: Friday, March 24, 2017

Time: 4:30 PM to 5:30 PM Note: all times are in the Eastern Time Zone

Public: Yes

Location: 10-250

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Host: Prof. Tomaso Poggio, CBMM, CSAIL, BCS, MIBR

Contact: Kathleen Sullivan, kdsulliv@csail.mit.edu

Relevant URL: https://cbmm.mit.edu/news-events/events/brains-minds-and-machines-seminar-series-future-autonomous-driving

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Reminder Subject: TALK: The Convergence of Machine Learning and Artificial Intelligence Towards Enabling Autonomous Driving

Abstract: The field of transportation is undergoing a seismic change with the coming introduction of autonomous driving. The technologies required to enable computer driven cars involves the latest cutting edge artificial intelligence algorithms along three major thrusts: Sensing, Planning and Mapping. I will describe the challenges and the kind of machine learning algorithms involved, and will do that through the perspective of Mobileye’s activity in this domain.

Bio: Prof. Amnon Shashua holds the Sachs chair in computer science at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. His field of expertise is computer vision and machine learning. For his academic achievements, he received the MARR prize Honorable Mention in 2001, the Kaye innovation award in 2004, and the Landau award in exact sciences in 2005.

In 1999 Prof. Shashua co-founded Mobileye, an Israeli company developing a system-on-chip and computer vision algorithms for a driving assistance system, providing a full range of active safety features using a single camera. Today, approximately 10 million cars from 23 automobile manufacturers rely on Mobileye technology to make their vehicles safer to drive. In August 2014, Mobileye claimed the title for largest Israeli IPO ever, by raising $1B at a market cap of $5.3B. In addition, Mobileye is developing autonomous driving technology with more than a dozen car manufacturers. An early version of Mobileye’s autonomous driving technology was deployed in series as an "autopilot" feature in October, 2015, and will evolve to support more autonomous features in 2016 and beyond. The introduction of autonomous driving capabilities is of a transformative nature and has the potential of changing the way cars are built, driven and own in the future.

In 2010 Prof. Shashua co-founded OrCam which harnesses the power of artificial vision to assist people who are visually impaired or blind. The OrCam MyEye device is unique in its ability to provide visual aid to hundreds of millions of people, through a discreet wearable platform. Within its wide-ranging scope of capabilities, OrCam’s device can read most texts (both indoors and outdoors) and learn to recognize thousands of new items and faces.

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See other events that are part of the Brains, Minds and Machines Seminar Series 2017.

Created by Kathleen Sullivan Email at Friday, March 17, 2017 at 11:17 AM.