Andrew Yan-Tak Ng(Chinese:Ngô ân đạt;born 1976) is a British-Americancomputer scientistandtechnology entrepreneurfocusing onmachine learningandartificial intelligence(AI).[2]Ng was a cofounder and head ofGoogle Brainand was the former Chief Scientist atBaidu,building the company's Artificial Intelligence Group into a team of several thousand people.[3]
Andrew Ng | |
---|---|
Born | Andrew Yan-Tak Ng April 18, 1976 [citation needed] |
Nationality | British |
Education | Raffles Institution |
Alma mater | University of California, Berkeley(PhD) Massachusetts Institute of Technology(MS) Carnegie Mellon University(BS) |
Known for | Artificial intelligence,deep learning,MOOC,education technology |
Spouse | |
Children | 2 |
Mother | Tisa Ho |
Awards |
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Scientific career | |
Fields | computer science,Artificial intelligence,machine learning,natural language processing,computer vision |
Institutions | |
Thesis | Shaping and policy search in reinforcement learning(2003) |
Doctoral advisor | Michael I. Jordan |
Notable students | |
Website | andrewng |
Andrew Ng | |||||||||||
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Traditional Chinese | Ngô ân đạt | ||||||||||
Simplified Chinese | Ngô ân đạt | ||||||||||
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Ng is anadjunct professoratStanford University(formerlyassociate professorand Director of itsStanford AI Labor SAIL). Ng has also worked in the field ofonline education,cofoundingCourseraand DeepLearning.AI.[4]He has spearheaded many efforts to "democratize deep learning" teaching over 8 million students through his online courses.[5][2][6]Ng is renowned globally in computer science, recognized inTime magazine's 100 Most Influential People in 2012 andFast Company'sMost Creative People in 2014. His influence extends to being named in theTime100AI Most Influential People in 2023.[6]
In 2018, he launched and currently heads the AI Fund, initially a $175-million investment fund for backing artificial intelligence startups. He has founded Landing AI, which provides AI-poweredSaaSproducts.[7]
On April 11, 2024,Amazonannounced the appointment of Ng to its board of directors.[8]
Biography
editNg was born in theUnited Kingdom,[9]in 1976 to Ronald Paul Ng, a hematologist andTisa Ho,an arts administrator,[10][11][12]who were both immigrants fromHong Kong.He has at least one brother.[11]In his youth, Ng lived in Hong Kong and Singapore.[9]Ng attended and graduated fromRaffles Institution.[13]
In 1997, he earned his undergraduate degree with a triple major incomputer science,statistics,andeconomicsfromCarnegie Mellon UniversityinPittsburgh,Pennsylvania.Between 1996 and 1998 he also conducted research onreinforcement learning,model selection,andfeature selectionat the AT&TBell Labs.[14]
In 1998, Ng earned hismaster's degreein Electrical Engineering and Computer Science from theMassachusetts Institute of Technology(MIT) inCambridge, Massachusetts.At MIT, he built the first publicly available, automatically indexed web-search engine for research papers on the web. It was a precursor toCiteSeerX/ResearchIndex,but specialized in machine learning.[14]
In 2002, he received hisDoctor of Philosophy(Ph.D.) in Computer Science from theUniversity of California, Berkeley,under the supervision ofMichael I. Jordan.His thesis is titled "Shaping and policy search inreinforcement learning"and is well-cited to this day.[14][15]
He started working as an assistant professor atStanford Universityin 2002 and as an associate professor in 2009.[16]
He currently lives inLos Altos Hills,California.In 2014, he marriedCarol E. Reiley.[17]They have two children: a daughter born in 2019[18]and a son born in 2021.[19]TheMIT Technology Reviewnamed Ng and Reiley an "AI power couple".[20][21]
Career
editAcademia and teaching
editNg is aprofessorat Stanford University departments of Computer Science andelectrical engineering.He served as the director of theStanford Artificial Intelligence Laboratory(SAIL), where he taught students and undertook research related todata mining,big data,and machine learning. His machine learning course CS229 at Stanford is the most popular course offered on campus with over 1,000 students enrolling some years.[22][23]As of 2020, three of most popular courses on Coursera are Ng's: Machine Learning (#1), AI for Everyone (#5), Neural Networks and Deep Learning (#6).[24]
In 2008, his group at Stanford was one of the first in the US to start advocating the use ofGPUsin deep learning.[citation needed]The rationale was that an efficient computation infrastructure could speed upstatistical modeltraining by orders of magnitude, ameliorating some of the scaling issues associated with big data. At the time it was a controversial and risky decision, but since then and following Ng's lead, GPUs have become a cornerstone in the field. Since 2017, Ng has been advocating the shift tohigh-performance computing(HPC) for scaling up deep learning and accelerating progress in the field.[citation needed]
In 2012, along with Stanford computer scientistDaphne Kollerhe cofounded and was CEO ofCoursera,a website that offers free online courses to everyone.[2][failed verification]It took off with over 100,000 students registered for Ng's popular CS229A course.[25]Today, several million people have enrolled in Coursera courses, making the site one of the leadingmassive open online courses(MOOCs) in the world.
Industry
editFrom 2011 to 2012, he worked atGoogle,where he founded and directed theGoogle BrainDeep Learning Project withJeff Dean,Greg Corrado, and Rajat Monga.
In 2014, he joinedBaiduas chief scientist, and carried out research related to big data and AI.[26]There he set up several research teams for things likefacial recognitionand Melody, an AIchatbotforhealthcare.[3]He also developed for the company the AI platform called DuerOS and other technologies that positioned Baidu ahead of Google in the discourse and development of AI.[27]In March 2017, he announced his resignation from Baidu.[2][28]
He soon afterward launched DeepLearning.AI, an online series of deep learning courses (including the AI for Good Specialization).[29]Then Ng launched Landing AI, which provides AI-poweredSaaSproducts.[30]
In January 2018, Ng unveiled the AI Fund, raising $175 million to invest in newstartups.[31]In November 2021, Landing AI secured a $57 million round of series A funding led by McRock Capital, to help manufacturers adopt computer vision.[32]
Research
editNg researches primarily inmachine learning,deep learning,machine perception,computer vision,andnatural language processing;and is one of the world's most famous and influential computer scientists.[33]He's frequently won best paper awards at academic conferences and has had a huge impact on the field of AI, computer vision, and robotics.[34][35]
During graduate school, together withDavid M. BleiandMichael I. Jordan,Ng co-authored the influential paper that introducedlatent Dirichlet allocation(LDA) for his thesis on reinforcement learning for drones.[36]
His early work includes the Stanford Autonomous Helicopter project, which developed one of the most capable autonomous helicopters in the world.[37][38]He was the leading scientist and principal investigator on the STAIR (Stanford Artificial Intelligence Robot) project,[39]which resulted inRobot Operating System(ROS), a widely usedopen source softwareroboticsplatform. His vision to build an AI robot and put a robot in every home inspired Scott Hassan to back him and createWillow Garage.[40]He is also one of the founding team members for the Stanford WordNet project, which uses machine learning to expand thePrincetonWordNetdatabase created byChristiane Fellbaum.[14][41]
In 2011, Ng founded theGoogle Brainproject atGoogle,which developed large-scale artificialneural networksusing Google's distributed computing infrastructure.[42]Among its notable results was a neural network trained usingdeep learningalgorithms on 16,000CPU cores,which learned to recognize cats after watching onlyYouTubevideos, and without ever having been told what a "cat" is.[43][44]The project's technology is also currently used in theAndroidoperating system'sspeech recognitionsystem.[45]
Online education: massive open online course
editExternal audio | |
---|---|
Interview with Coursera Co-Founder Andrew Ng,Degree of Freedom[46] |
In 2011, Stanford launched a total of threemassive open online course(MOOCs) on machine learning (CS229a),databases,and AI, taught by Ng,Peter Norvig,Sebastian Thrun,andJennifer Widom.[47][48]This has led to the modern MOOC movement. Ng taught machine learning and Widom taught databases. The course on AI taught by Thrun led to the genesis ofUdacity.[47]
The seeds of massive open online courses (MOOCs) go back a few years before the founding of Coursera in 2012. Two themes emphasized in the founding of modern MOOCs werescaleandavailability.[47]
By 2023, Ng has notably expanded access to AI education, with an estimated 8 million individuals worldwide taking his courses via platforms like DeepLearning.AI and Coursera.[6]
Founding of Coursera
editNg started theStanford Engineering Everywhere(SEE) program, which in 2008 published a number of Stanford courses online for free. Ng taught one of these courses, "Machine Learning", which includes his video lectures, along with the student materials used in the Stanford CS229 class. It offered a similar experience toMIT OpenCourseWare,except it aimed at providing a more "complete course" experience, equipped with lectures, course materials, problems and solutions, etc. The SEE videos were viewed by the millions and inspired Ng to develop and iterate new versions of online tech.[47]
Within Stanford, they includeDaphne Kollerwith her "blended learning experiences" and codesigning a peer-grading system, John Mitchell (Courseware, aLearning Management System),Dan Boneh(using machine learning to sync videos, later teachingcryptographyon Coursera),Bernd Girod(ClassX), and others. Outside Stanford, Ng and Thrun creditSal KhanofKhan Academyas a huge source of inspiration. Ng was also inspired bylyndaand the design of the forums ofStack Overflow.[47]
Widom, Ng, and others were ardent advocates of Khan-styled tablet recordings, and between 2009 and 2011, several hundred hours of lecture videos recorded by Stanford instructors were recorded and uploaded. Ng tested some of the original designs with a local high school to figure the best practices for recording lessons.[47]
In October 2011, the "applied" version of the Stanford class (CS229a) was hosted on ml-class.org and launched, with over 100,000 students registered for its first edition. The course featured quizzes and graded programming assignments and became one of the first and most successful massive open online courses (MOOCs) created by a Stanford professor.[49]
Two other courses on databases (db-class.org) and AI (ai-class.org) were launched. The ml-class and db-class ran on a platform developed by students, including Frank Chen, Jiquan Ngiam, Chuan-Yu Foo, and Yifan Mai. Word spread through social media and popular press. The three courses were 10 weeks long, and over 40,000 "Statements of Accomplishment" were awarded.[47]
Ng tells the following story on the early days of Coursera:
In 2011, I was working with four Stanford students. We were under tremendous pressure to build new features for the 100,000+ students that were already signed up. One of the students (Frank Chen) claims another one (Jiquan Ngiam) frequently stranded him in the Stanford building and refused to give him a ride back to his dorm until very late at night so he had no choice but to stick around and keep working. I neither confirm nor deny this story.[50]
His work subsequently led to his founding of Coursera with Koller in 2012. As of 2019, the two most popular courses on the platform were taught and designed by Ng: "Machine Learning" (#1) and "Neural Networks and Deep Learning" (#2).
Post-Coursera work
editIn 2019, Ng launched a new course "AI for Everyone". This is a non-technical course designed to help people understand AI's impact on society and its benefits and costs for companies, as well as how they can navigate through thistechnological revolution.[51]
Venture capital
editNg is the chair of the board for Woebot Labs, a psychological clinic that usesdata scienceto providecognitive behavioral therapy.It provides a therapychatbotto help treat depression, among other things.[52]
He is also a member of the board of directors fordrive.ai,which uses AI forself-driving carsand was acquired by Apple in 2019.[53][54]
Through Landing AI, he also focuses on democratizing AI technology and lowering the barrier for entrance to businesses and developers.[7]
Publications and awards
editNg is also the author or co-author of over 300 publications inrobotics,and related fields.[55]His work incomputer visionanddeep learninghas been featured often in press releases and reviews.[56]
- 1995. Bell Atlantic Network Services Scholarship[57]
- 1995, 1996. Microsoft Technical Scholarship Award[57]
- 1996. Andrew Carnegie Society Scholarship[57]
- 1998–2000: Berkeley Fellowship[57]
- 2001–2002: Microsoft Research Fellowship[57]
- 2007. Alfred P. Sloan Research Fellowship Sloan Foundation Faculty Fellowship[58]
- 2008.Massachusetts Institute of Technology(MIT)Technology Review,35Innovators Under 35(TR35)[59][60]
- 2009. IJCAI Computers and Thought Award (the highest award in AI given to a researcher under 35)[61]
- 2009. Vance D. & Arlene C. Coffman Faculty Scholar Award
- 2013.Time100Most Influential People[62]
- 2013.Fortune's40 under 40[63]
- 2013.CNN10: Thinkers[64]
- 2014.Fast Company'sMost Creative People in Business[65]
- 2015.World Economic Forum Young Global Leaders[66]
- 2023.TimeAI 100Most Influential People[6]
- 2024 Honorary Fellowship of theRoyal Statistical Society.[67]
He has corefereed hundreds of AI publications in journals likeNeurIPS.He has also been the editor of the Journal of Artificial Intelligence Research (JAIR), Associate Editor for theIEEERobotics and Automation Society Conference Editorial Board (ICRA), and much more.[14]
He has given invited talks atNASA,Google,Microsoft,Lockheed Martin,theMax Planck Society,Stanford,Princeton,UPenn,Cornell,MIT,UC Berkeley,and dozens of other universities. Outside of the US, he has lectured in Spain, Germany, Israel, China, Korea, and Canada.[14]
He has also written forHarvard Business Review,HuffPost,Slate,Apple News,and Quora Sessions' Twitter.[citation needed]He also writes a weekly digital newsletter calledThe Batch.
Books
editHe also wrote a bookMachine Learning Yearning,a practical guide for those interested in machine learning, which he distributed for free.[68]In December 2018, he wrote a sequel calledAI Transformation Playbook.[69]
Ng contributed one chapter toArchitects of Intelligence: The Truth About AI from the People Building it(2018) by the American futuristMartin Ford.
Views on AI
editNg thinks that the real threat is contemplating the future of work: "Rather than being distracted by evil killer robots, the challenge to labor caused by these machines is a conversation that academia and industry and government should have."[70]A particular goal of Ng's work is to "democratize" AI learning so that people can learn more about it and understand its benefits.[citation needed]
In a December 2023Financial Timesinterview, Ng highlighted concerns regarding the impact of potential regulations onopen-source AI,emphasizing how reporting, licensing, and liability risks could unfairly burden smaller firms and stifle innovation. He argued that regulating basic technologies like open-source models could hinder progress without markedly enhancing safety. Ng advocated for carefully designed regulations to prevent obstacles to the development and distribution of beneficial AI technologies.[71]
See also
editReferences
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- ^Ng, Terry (September 26, 2020)."After His Son Co-Founded Coursera, He Became Its Earliest Student and Completed 146 Courses".Rice Media.
- ^ab"Healer, teacher".The Straits Times. Archived fromthe originalon November 10, 2023.RetrievedFebruary 25,2022.
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- ^"A Conversation with Professor Andrew Ng".22 January 2014.Archivedfrom the original on 27 July 2024.Retrieved17 September2024.
- ^abcdefNg, Andrew."Cirriculum Vitae: Andrew Y. Ng"(PDF).
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- ^Ng, Andrew Y. (May 20, 2015)."Curriculum Vitæ: Andrew Y. Ng"(PDF).Stanford Artificial Intelligence Laboratory.RetrievedOctober 9,2020.
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- ^Ng, Andrew (February 20, 2019)."Announcing Nova Ng, our first daughter. Plus, some thoughts on the AI-powered world she will grow up in..."@AndrewYNg.RetrievedMarch 7,2019.
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- ^Technology Review, MIT [@techreview] (December 2, 2016)."Register today to hear power couple @AndrewYNg and @robot_MD speak at #EmTechDigital this March - http://trib.al/WHpHY91"(Tweet).Archivedfrom the original on June 28, 2023.RetrievedJune 28,2023– viaTwitter.
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- ^Gannes, Liz (May 16, 2014)."Baidu Hires Coursera Founder Andrew Ng to Start Massive Research Lab".Recode.RetrievedAugust 29,2017.
- ^Webb, Amy (2019).The Big Nine: How the Tech Titans and Their Thinking Machines Could Warp Humanity.New York: PublicAffairs.ISBN978-1-5417-7374-5.
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- ^Markoff, John(June 25, 2012)."How Many Computers to Identify a Cat? 16,000".The New York Times.
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