-
· New post-graduate
artificial intelligence drive (AI) to boost productivity and
create high skilled jobs as part of the modern Industrial
Strategy
-
· New
industry-government AI Masters and 16 dedicated Centres at
universities across the country to train the next generation of
AI PhDs
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· Prestigious Alan
Turing Institute AI research fellowships now open - allowing
Britain to retain and attract the very best global
talent
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· New figures show
that inward investment to the UK AI sector has increased by 17%
over the past year, more than the whole of Europe
combined.
Thousands of graduates to become qualified experts in artificial
intelligence (AI) as part of a new joint government-industry
package to drive up skills in the AI sector, Business Secretary
and Digital Secretary announced today.
For the first time, the UK will have a nationwide programme of
industry-funded AI Masters courses coupled with work-based
placements.
The new skills and talent package is a major milestone of the
modern Industrial Strategy’s AI Sector Deal which was launched in
April 2018. It is supported by industry funding and up to
£110 million Government investment, including:
- · Up to 200 new AI Masters
places at UK universities funded by companies such as Deepmind,
QuantumBlack, Cisco and BAE Systems. The Masters programme marks
the first nationwide effort to address the skills gap at this
level, in collaboration with the Industry of Coding and
British Computer Society.
- · 1,000 students will have
the opportunity to enhance their skills with new PhDs at 16
dedicated UK Research and Innovation AI Centres for Doctoral
Training (CDTs), located across the country.
- · Up to 5 AI research
Fellowships, created in collaboration with The Alan Turing
Institute to both attract and retain the best research talent
from around the world.
The announcement comes as new figures prepared for Tech Nation by
Dealroom.co reveal the number of venture capital investments into
the UK’s rapidly growing AI sector leapt by 17% last year.
Business Secretary said:
“The UK has long been a nation of innovators. This AI skills and
talent investment will help nurture leading UK and international
talent to ensure we retain our world-beating reputation in
research and development.
“Artificial intelligence has great potential to drive up
productivity and enhance every industry throughout our economy,
from more effective disease diagnosis to building smart homes.
Today’s announcement is our modern Industrial Strategy in action,
investing in skills and talent to drive high skilled jobs, growth
and productivity across the UK.”
Digital Secretary said:
“The UK is not only the birthplace to the father of artificial
intelligence, Alan Turing, but we are leading the way on work to
ensure AI innovation has ethics at its core.
“We want to keep up this momentum and cement our reputation as
pioneers in AI. Working with world class academic
institutions and industry we will be able to train the next
generation of top-tier AI talent and maintain the UK’s reputation
as a trailblazer in emerging technologies.”
As companies throughout the UK increasingly use AI in processes
from manufacturing to fashion and construction to medical
imaging, upskilling people to develop and maintain the new
technology is crucial to its success in boosting productivity.
This is part of the government’s continued drive to be a
world-leader in harnessing the economic benefits of AI and the
data-driven revolution, as part of the modern Industrial
Strategy.
The schemes, aimed at people of different stages in higher
education and available to researchers at a variety of levels,
helps to build advanced AI skills at all levels, a key commitment
contained within the AI Sector Deal.
Dame Wendy Hall, AI Skills Champion said:
"I'm delighted to see the recommendations of the review that
Jérôme Pesenti and I wrote just over a year ago, coming to life
in such a comprehensive set of skills and talent
initiatives.
They provide a great impetus to developing AI skills and talent
and I strongly encourage industry, universities and those of you
who aspire to be part of putting the UK at the forefront of the
AI and data revolution to get involved in these three
initiatives."
Finally, to develop the best and brightest AI researchers in the
UK, the government is funding a new globally prestigious
Fellowship programme. The first wave has been launched by The
Alan Turing Institute.
Adrian Smith, Institute Director, The Alan Turing
Institute said:
“Artificial intelligence represents an incredible opportunity to
transform our economy and our lives for the better. The Turing AI
Fellowships will be crucial in building UK leadership capability,
driving forward ambitious research and ensuring that the UK can
attract, retain, and develop world-leading research talent.”
UK Research and Innovation Chief Executive, Professor Sir
Mark Walport, said:
“Artificial intelligence is a disruptive technology in a range of
sectors, enabling new products and services and transforming data
science. It allows us to develop new approaches to challenges as
diverse as early disease diagnosis and climate
change.
“To maintain its leadership in AI, the UK will need a new
generation of researchers, business leaders and entrepreneurs
equipped with new skills. Working with partners across academia
and industry, the centres announced today will provide the
foundations for these future leaders.”
The AI and Data Grand Challenge
The Industrial Strategy sets out Grand Challenges to put the UK
at the forefront of the industries of the future, ensuring that
the UK takes advantage of major global changes, improving
people’s lives and the country’s productivity. Artificial
intelligence and data is one of the four Grand Challenges which
will see AI used across a variety of industries and put the UK at
the forefront of the AI and data revolution. Exploring the best
skills package to equip people with the expertise to make the
most of AI was a key commitment of the AI and Data Grand
Challenge’s £950 million Sector Deal.
Notes to editors
Industry funded AI Masters
- Universities across England, Scotland and Wales are making up
to 200 new AI Masters places available in September 2019.
- The Masters programme offers a quick way to develop the
skills of existing employees, returners to work, or individuals
interested in converting their specialism to AI from other
disciplines.
- The Office for Artificial Intelligence is working with the
Institute of Coding and the British Computer Society to identify
viable AI Masters courses, and then connect universities with
industry partners who are keen to fund these new places.
- Eleven companies have committed their early support to
collectively fund up to 50 of these additional places and
work-based placements:
- Deepmind
- Quantum Black
- Cisco
- WilmotML
- BAE Systems
- Accenture
- Amplyfi
- Cambridge Consultants
- Cray
- Nvidia
- Infosys
- Discussions with universities and other companies are
ongoing with the support of British Computer Society and the
Institute of Coding.
- This group of companies represent an initial commitment to
this initiative. Further investment in AI Masters course places
from other companies is strongly encouraged in order to match the
potential for places in universities.
- If you are interested in applying please email The Institute
of Coding: AIMasters.IOC@bath.ac.uk
Centres for Doctoral Training
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Supported by £100 million investment from government, the UKRI
CDTs will support 1,000 students with around 200 students
starting each year for five years.
- They
will be multidisciplinary and directly relevant to the broad
range of sectors – from biomedicine to music – where AI can have
a transformative impact.
-
Sixteen UKRI CDTs in AI have been successful and it is expected
that more than 60 students will be supported at each UKRI CDT.
- Two
thirds of funding will be providing by UK Research and Innovation
(UKRI) and the remaining third by partners including those from
industry including Rolls Royce, AstraZenica, BT, Google,
Microsoft and Amazon. Partners are investing £78 million in cash
or in-kind contributions and partner universities are committing
a further £23 million.
- The
successful UKRI CDTs are:
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University College London
- UKRI AI
Centre for Doctoral Training in Foundational Artificial
Intelligence
- UKRI
Centre for Doctoral Training in AI-enabled healthcare
systems
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University of Exeter
- UKRI
Centre for Doctoral Training in Environmental
Intelligence: Data Science & AI for Sustainable
Futures
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University of Edinburgh
- UKRI
Centre for Doctoral Training in Natural Language
Processing
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Queen Mary University of London
- UKRI
Centre for Doctoral Training in Artificial Intelligence
and Music
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University of Sheffield
- UKRI
Centre for Doctoral Training in Speech and Language
Technologies and their Applications
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Imperial College London
- UKRI
Centre for Doctoral Training in Artificial Intelligence
for Healthcare
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University of Bath
- UKRI
Centre for Doctoral Training in Accountable, Responsible
and Transparent AI
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Swansea University
- UKRI
Centre for Doctoral Training in Artificial Intelligence,
Machine Learning and Advanced Computing
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University of Southampton
- UKRI
Centre for Doctoral Training in Machine Intelligence for
Nano-electronic Devices and Systems
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University of Edinburgh
- UKRI
Centre for Doctoral Training in Biomedical Artificial
Intelligence
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University of Glasgow
- UKRI
Centre for Doctoral Training in Socially Intelligent
Artificial Agents (SOCIAL)
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University of Bristol
- UKRI
Centre for Doctoral Training in Interactive Artificial
Intelligence
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University of Cambridge
- UKRI
Centre for Doctoral Training in Application of Artificial
Intelligence to the study of Environmental Risks (AI4ER)
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King’s College London
- UKRI
Centre for Doctoral Training in Safe and Trusted
Artificial Intelligence
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University of Leeds
- UKRI
Centre for Doctoral Training in Artificial Intelligence
for Medical Diagnosis and Care
The Alan Turing AI Fellowships
- · The Office
for Artificial Intelligence, The Alan Turing Institute and UKRI
have worked together to design an initial call for a small number
of Fellows.
- · Competitive
funding packages will be available to established mid-career and
senior AI researchers to develop a transformative research
programme over 5 years. The initiative covers a broad range of AI
applications across mathematical sciences, statistical sciences,
computational sciences and engineering. Consideration may also be
given to AI work that interfaces with the life science, social
sciences or humanities. Fellowships may be full-time or
part-time, with the option to work on other additional activities
if working part-time.
- · £8.5 million
government funding has been secured for the first Wave of the
Fellowships
- · The Alan
Turing Institute published the call on 18 February, with Fellows
taking up roles in time for the 2019/20 academic year, with the
Fellowships lasting 5 years.
- · Further AI
Fellowship opportunities will be launched later in 2019.
- Examples of
research areas which are of particular interest to the UK AI
ecosystem and which span academic disciplines include:
- AI ethics (including fairness, interpretability, privacy).
- AI safety (including robustness, adversarial learning,
security, control).
- Robotics, vision, sensing, and visualisation.
- Reasoning and autonomous decision making with uncertainty.
- Multi-agent systems and agent-based modelling.
- Machine learning
- Language (including Natural Language Processing).
- Applications of AI across a range of disciplines e.g.
engineering, finance/economics, manufacturing, medicine,
science, the environment and transport.