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Canberra Today 11°/14° | Friday, April 19, 2024 | Digital Edition | Crossword & Sudoku

Bell takes the reins of the artificial intelligence revolution

Prof Genevieve Bell… “How are we going to feel in a world where autonomous agents are doing things and we aren’t? How are we going to be safe in this world?”

THE Australian National University has announced a 10-year program to drive an artificial intelligence revolution in Australia. 

The expansion will be led by one of the world’s top technologists Prof Genevieve Bell and will be based within the ANU College of Engineering and Computer Science.

Prof Bell recently joined ANU from Intel as the first of five appointments under the ANU Vice-Chancellor’s Entrepreneurial Fellows scheme.

She has also been appointed the inaugural Florence Violet McKenzie Chair at ANU, named in honour of Australia’s first female electrical engineer.

Under the expansion, Prof Bell will lead a new Autonomy, Agency and Assurance Institute, to be known as the 3A Institute, co-founded with CSIRO’s Data61, Australia’s largest data innovation network.

The 3A Institute will bring together the best researchers from around the world and a range of disciplines to tackle complex problems around artificial intelligence, data and technology and managing their impact on humanity.

ANU Vice-Chancellor Prof Brian Schmidt said ANU was committed to help solve the most pressing problems facing the world and the new institute will drive innovation, research and policy responses.

“It isn’t just about engineering and computer science, it’s also about anthropology, sociology, psychology, economics, philosophy, public policy and many other disciplines – you have got to put it all together to get to the best answers possible,” Prof Schmidt said.

“Prof Bell’s extraordinary experience and depth of knowledge in this area will ensure Australia remains prepared to meet the big social, cultural and political questions around our technological future.”

Prof Bell said there was a critical set of questions to be answered around autonomy, agency and assurance if the world is to meet challenges of future technology.

“We, as humans, are simultaneously terrified, optimistic and ultimately ambivalent about what it’s going to be like,” she said.

“How are we going to feel in a world where autonomous agents are doing things and we aren’t? How are we going to be safe in this world?

“We will be looking closely at risk, indemnity, privacy, trust – things that fall under this broad term ‘assurance’.”

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Ian Meikle, editor

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