Great Minds in Engineering: Shih-Fu Chang with Kai-Fu Lee
Columbia Engineering Interim Dean Shih-Fu Chang speaks with AI pioneer Kai-Fu Lee
AI pioneer and best-selling author Kai-Fu Lee recently sat down with Columbia Engineering Interim Dean Shih-Fu Chang for a wide-ranging conversation touching on key technologies, such as machine learning, cryptocurrencies, and virtual reality, and how they might shape our lives over the next 20 years.
Lee, whose new book “AI 2041: Ten Visions for Our Future” was recently published, is a seminal figure in AI technology, inventor of the first AI to defeat a world champion in the game Othello in 1988. Lee got his academic start in computer science with a bachelor’s from Columbia in 1983 and went on to be a president of Google China and executive at Microsoft, SGI, and Apple. He is currently CEO of Sinovation Ventures and president of Sinovation Ventures’ Artificial Intelligence Institute.
Dean Chang is also a professor of computer science and electrical engineering, as well as inaugural director of Columbia Center of Artificial Intelligence Technology. He is a world-renowned expert in computer vision, multimedia, and artificial intelligence.
The talk and audience questions were moderated by Jessica Tsoong BS’08, a tech entrepreneur and angel investor currently based in the Bay Area, California.
Header image: Columbia Engineering Interim Dean Shih-Fu Chang and Kai-Fu Lee
In her opening remarks, Dean Boyce touched on the School’s deep focus on AI research. “This is an area that Columbia Engineering is quite committed to,” she said, adding that over 50 faculty members—almost a quarter of the faculty—are actively investigating artificial intelligence across all departments. “They are either working on the foundations of AI or they are bringing AI into their domains. They may be discovering new materials, creating innovative new business models, or looking at how do we bring engineering impact into medicine.”
Lee, who devised a first-of-its-kind speech recognition system for his PhD thesis, is a widely cited expert on the subject. Presently head of Sinovation Ventures, a venture capital (VC) firm that has launched five, billion-plus-dollar tech startups, and the author of seven best-selling books, Lee also served as founding president of Google China. In 2017, he spoke at Columbia Engineering’s graduation ceremony, which he credited with sowing the seeds for his latest venture. “It’s great to be back at my alma mater and to be talking about my new book, the idea for which actually came from my Class Day speech,” Lee told the crowd at Davis.
The financier began his talk with a brief overview of how and why AI technology has advanced so rapidly in China over the past decade. In the last ten years, a fierce approach to entrepreneurship combined with favorable regulation and access to a uniquely rich trove of data transformed the country into an AI juggernaut. In 2017, VC funding in China eclipsed similar investment in the US.
But while the pace of China’s rise might give some pause, Lee cautioned the audience not to view AI development in the two countries as a zero-sum game. “The growth of one doesn’t imply shrinking of the other,” he said.
The more pressing issue is an AI-induced existential threat faced by both, he argued. Unprecedented risks to areas such as privacy and security lurk just below our collective horizon. The greatest challenge, however, will likely arise from AI’s potential to undermine labor markets and social systems across the globe as it greatly exacerbates income inequality and automates many jobs out of existence by midcentury.
But we needn’t feel powerless in the face of such dire predictions, Lee said.
“I propose that if we do a very good job in the next 20 years, AI will be viewed as an age of enlightenment,” he said.
To effectively and fairly manage the transition will require nothing less than a realignment of the world economy, Lee posited, so as to adequately compensate work based on the kind of compassion and creativity machines are incapable of. It also requires redirecting our parochial instincts toward a new era of international cooperation. Such a golden age would not only liberate humanity from routine work, but also push people to think more deeply and expansively about what it means to be human.
“For those who fear AI, fear not,” he said. “Because AI is just a tool. We are the masters of AI. We uniquely have free will, and we will be the ones to write the ending of the story of humans and AI.”
Lee’s talk was the first in a new Engineering for Humanity lecture series focusing on how technology can have a positive impact on humanity. The next installment takes place on Nov. 28, when Dean Boyce and Biomedical Engineering Professor Elizabeth Hillman join alumni Greg Dorn and Shivrat Chhabra to discuss health and wellness technology at the Computer History Museum in Mountain View, CA.
Images from the challenge
Highlights from the student teams
Watch the Class Day ceremony on Youtube
Columbia Engineering honored the Class of 2021 at Virtual Commencement Ceremonies on Thursday, April 29.
Watch the Class Day ceremony on Youtube
School of Engineering and Science - Graduate Class Day 2021
Class of 2021 Award Winners
Valedictorian and Illig Prize – Noah Huber-Feely
Salutatorian – Alexander Paskov
George Vincent Wendell Prize – Adheli Gonzalez
Morton B. Friedman Memorial Prize for Excellence – Tingjun Chen
Graduate Student Life Leadership Awards – Christophe Jean-Michael and Aimee Rose Moses
Doctoral Graduate Student Life Leadership Award – Shreya Narasimhan
The full program is available online.
Faculty Award Winners
Edward and Carole Kim Award for Faculty Involvement
Ali Hirsa, Professor of Professional Practice
Yevgeniy Yesilevskiy, Lecturer in the Discipline of Innovation and Design
Janette and Armen Avanessians Diversity Award
Chris Boyce, Assistant Professor of Chemical Engineering
Augustin Chaintreau, Associate Professor of Computer Science