NYU and KAIST Launch Major New Initiative on Artificial Intelligence … – New York University

NYU President Linda G. Mills and Korean Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST) President Kwang Hyung Lee were joined by Sung Bae Jun, president of the Institute of Information & Communications Technology Planning & Evaluation, and Joon Hee Joh, president of the Korea Software Industry Association in signing an agreement to collaborate on a major Artificial Intelligence (AI) and digital technologies research effort.

Senior public officialsincluding the President of the Republic of Korea, Yoon Suk Yeol; Koreas Minister of Science and Information and Communications Technology Jong-Ho Lee; the Director of the US National Science Foundation Sethuraman Panchanathan; NYC Deputy Mayor for Housing, Economic Development, and Workforce Maria Torres-Springerand Turing Prize-winning AI scientist and NYU faculty member Yann LeCun convened at NYUs Greenwich Village campus to mark the new partnership and launch a Digital Vision Forum with leading thinkers on AI and digital governance from around the world. Senator Charles Schumer participated in the proceedings via video. The event also importantly marked the anniversary of the first Digital Vision Forum, which was held precisely a year ago at NYU to initiate the partnership between NYU, the Republic of Korea, and KAIST, an event that also featured remarks by President Yoon.

Todays historic event positions NYU, New York City, and Korea at the forefront of the global science and tech ecosystem of the future. NYU President Mills said, We are honored to bring together leaders in government, academia, and industry to commemorate a vital and historic partnership that will propel scholarship and advancements in technology. We are thrilled by this partnership, which exemplifies both NYUs commitment to global learning and research as well as our role in fueling the growth of New York Citys tech, science, and innovation sector.

Senator Schumer said, I want to commend President Yoon and my friend, NYU President Linda Mills, on todays announcement of a historic joint research program between NYU and the South Korean government. The partnership is a partnership made in heaven: NYU, one of the nations leading research institutions, and South Korea, one of Americas strongest allies and partners, and also a leader in research and science, collaborating on one of the most important issues of our time, artificial intelligence.

NSF Director Panchanathan said, As our two presidents affirmed at the State Visit in April, the U.S. and the Republic of Korea have a truly global alliance that champions democratic principles, enriches economic cooperation, and empowers technological advances. NSF shares in President Yoon's conviction that human values are important in the development of new technology. Values including openness and transparency, and the creation of AI tools that are responsible and ethical, without bias, and protect the security and privacy of our people.

The research effortthe ROK Institutions-NYU AI and Digital Partnershipaims to conduct world-class research in AI and digital technologies. The partnership is expected to be headquartered at NYU.

Todays event marks the expansion of NYUs previously announced partnership and strengthens the Universitys links to Korea and its institutions. The event included a wide-ranging panel discussion about AI and digital governance by prominent scholars in the field. The panel was moderated by Professor Matthew Liao, director of the Center for Bioethics at NYUs School of Global Public Health, the panelists included:

Professor Kyung-hyun Cho, Deputy Director for NYU Center for Data Science & Courant Institute

Professor Luciano Floridi, Founding Director of the Digital Ethics Center, Yale University

Professor Urs Gasser, Rector of the Hochschule fur Politik, Technical University of Munich

Professor Shannon Vallor, Baillie Gifford Professor in the Ethics of Data and Artificial Intelligence, University of Edinburgh

Professor Stefaan Verhulst, Co-Founder & Director of GovLab's Data Program, NYU Tandon School of Engineering, and

Professor Jong Chul Ye, Director of Promotion Council for Digital Health, KAIST

For NYUs new president, Linda G. Mills, this is the third major global agreement she has signed this month. She earlier signed a research partnership agreement with IIT Kanpur in India (an agreement cited by US President Joe Biden and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi in their joint statement) and renewed a partnership agreement between NYUs Shanghai campus and East China Normal University. Building on NYUs unrivaled global presence, strength, and character is expected to be a major priority of her administration.

About NYU

Founded in 1831, NYU is one of the worlds foremost research universities (with more than $1 billion per year in research expenditures) and is a member of the selective Association of American Universities. NYU has degree-granting university campuses in New York, Abu Dhabi, and Shanghai; has 12 other global academic sites, including London, Paris, Florence, Tel Aviv, Buenos Aires, and Accra; and both sends more students to study abroad and educates more international students than any other U.S. college or university. Through its numerous schools and colleges, NYU is a leader in conducting research and providing education in the arts and sciences, law, medicine, engineering, business, dentistry, education, nursing, the cinematic and performing arts, music and studio arts, public administration, social work, and professional studies, among other areas.

About KAIST

Since KAIST was established in 1971, KAIST and its alumni have been the gateway to advanced science and technology, innovation, and entrepreneurship and have made a significant contribution to creating the dynamic economy of todays Korea. KAIST has now emerged as one of the most innovative universities; it ranked 1st among the Most Innovative Universities in Asia from 2016 to 2018 and 11th in the Worlds Most Innovative Universities in 2018 by Thomson Reuters. KAIST was named as one of the Global 100 Innovators in 2021 by Clarivate, the only university listed. QS ranked KAIST the 20th-best university in engineering and technology in 2022, and the Nature Indexs Young University Ranking placed KAIST 4th in the world. KAIST continues to spearhead innovation and lead the advance of science and technology in Korea and beyond, and aims to contribute to the development of new dynamic engines of growth and innovation through collaboration with NYU to foster more future-oriented, creative global talents, young researchers, and entrepreneurs in the creative environment of New York City.

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NYU and KAIST Launch Major New Initiative on Artificial Intelligence ... - New York University

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