Judea Pearl wins Spain's Frontiers of Knowledge Award for AI

The BBVA Foundation Frontiers of Knowledge Award in Information and Communication Technologies has gone in this fourteenth edition to Judea Pearl for “bringing a modern foundation to artificial intelligence,” in the words of the selection committee Judea Pearl, winner of the 14th BBVA Foundation Frontiers of Knowledge Award in ICT.

The BBVA Foundation Frontiers of Knowledge Award in Information and Communication Technologies has gone in this fourteenth edition to Judea Pearl for “bringing a modern foundation to artificial intelligence,” in the words of the selection committee. Pearl, a Professor of Computer Science and Director of the Cognitive Systems Laboratory at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), has made conceptual mathematical, and formal contributions that enable AI programs to effectively interiorize two of the key resources we humans use to interpret the world and arrive at decisions: probability and causality. With the formal language he developed, these vital decision-making processes can be encoded into computer programs.

“By laying the mathematical foundations for probabilistic reasoning and the inference of causal relationships,” the citation continues, “Pearl constructed a framework not only for computer-based thought, but for fields spanning computer science, mathematics and statistics, epidemiology, and health, and the social sciences.”

The methods Pearl developed are taught today in every computer science school, and his books “have inspired sweeping new advancements across our understanding of reasoning and thought.” The “breadth and depth of his interdisciplinary impact” extends into multiple areas and applications, including “the development of fair and effective medical clinical trials,” the citation adds, as well as “in psychology, robotics, and biology.”

Pearl’s candidature was supported by eminent researchers in Europe and the United States, experts in computer science, artificial intelligence, psychology, economics, and philosophy. Among them is the Nobel laureate in Economics Daniel Kahneman, who says of his nominee: “During my long career I have known quite a few scholars who were recognized as giants in their field. I do not think I ever encountered one who evoked as much reverence and as much affection as Judea Pearl.”

Another of his nominators, Vinton G. Cerf, Vice President and Chief Internet Evangelist at Google (United States), recalls how he has “watched in admiration as his work has blazed new trails, often against conventional wisdom. Judea Pearl pressed on in his research in the face of considerable skepticism and his efforts were soundly rewarded.”

For nominator Ramón López de Mántaras, head of the Artificial Intelligence Research Institute (IIIA) of the Spanish National Research Council, “Pearl’s work is fundamental because it provides tools that will equip machines with the kind of cause-and-effect driven knowledge each one of us uses in our daily lives. He has devised a mathematical language whereby an AI system can ask not just ‘Why’ questions about the reasons things happen but also ‘What if’ questions, that is, what would have happened if things had been done differently. In medicine, for instance, we can ask what might have happened if we had prescribed the patient a different medication.”

A “less opaque” AI

Nominators are keen to emphasize that, compared to other lines of AI and statistics like deep learning or neural networks, Pearl’s contribution lends transparency that is vital in determining applications, such as decision-making in medicine and on legal or economic issues.

Vinton G. Cerf notes that Pearl’s latest books on causality and reasoning “are milestones in Bayesian analysis and machine learning. Pearl makes a powerful argument that without a causal model, the correlations discovered by deep neural networks will not bear much fruit.”

Pedro Larrañaga, Professor of Artificial Intelligence at the Universidad Politécnica de Madrid (UPM) has, over three decades, made a theoretical study of Pearl’s contributions, as well as applying them in areas that include bioinformatics, neuroscience, and industry. As he sees it, the awardee’s insights facilitate a “less opaque” AI that reveals by what reasoning intelligent systems have arrived at a given conclusion: “Many of the recent breakthroughs in AI have been based on neural networks that employ deep-learning algorithms. But these programs are like black boxes, where it’s not possible to trace how they came to solve the problem. Lined up on the other side are those of us who work habitually with Pearl’s Bayesian networks, in the belief that interpretability has to be a cornerstone of AI.”

Larrañaga is convinced that this is the direction in which AI will head, especially in areas like medicine or in decisions with legal or financial implications: “There is a growing call both in the U.S. and Europe for an AI ethics, and for processes to be audited. That is why I think Pearl’s approach will win the day because it offers more transparency.”

Ramón López de Mántaras expresses a similar view, adding that the tools provided by Pearl’s work “bring explainability, that is, traceability to the chain of reasoning followed by an AI system in reaching its conclusion. This kind of system is more complex, but well worthwhile since it gives far greater confidence. A doctor, for example, can know why the machine has diagnosed a patient a certain way or recommended a certain treatment.”

“A computational model of deep understanding”

In an interview shortly after hearing of the award, Pearl summed up what he considered to be his essential contribution to modern AI: “For the first time we can understand what ‘understanding’ means, for the first time we have a computational model of deep understanding.” Pearl defines such understanding as “being able to answer questions of three important levels: prediction [what will happen in such and such a circumstance]; the effect of actions; and explanation, why things happened the way they did and what would have happened had things not occurred as they did. These three levels of sophistication are what the language now captures and that is what we mean by an understanding.”

Probabilistic reasoning and the ability to establish causal relationships are two areas where Pearl’s contributions are of pivotal importance. For Larrañaga, these are properties of the human mind that pose central challenges in AI: “Probabilistic reasoning is something we use all the time to deal with uncertainty, what we don’t know. A doctor, for instance, will always seek out the likeliest explanation for a patient’s symptoms.”

Machines that take decisions in conditions of uncertainty

Pearl has this to say about his contribution to understanding the probabilistic reasoning of the human brain, so it can be replicated by a computer system: “Uncertainty is the commodity that prevails in everyday decision-making, even crossing the street or taking aspirin or speaking with your friend, and we have quite a hard time in computer science to enable a computer to deal with the barrage of noise and uncertain information that one has about the world. So my work has developed a calculus for probabilistic reasoning that allows the computer to handle all the kinds of noise information that it gets, put them together, and come out with a probability about the conclusions.”

In the 1980s Pearl devised the mathematical language needed to wed classical AI with probability theory. His book Probabilistic Reasoning in Intelligent Systems, published in 1988 and still a landmark today, presented the graphical models, or “Bayesian networks,” that have since become a mainstay of machine learning and modern statistics.

A Bayesian network, as the committee describes it, “is a representation of events and their likelihood of occurrence. Such graphs enable simple and graphical articulations of highly complex event networks and their probabilistic relationships, which enabled computers to solve real-world scenarios, discover latent dependencies, and predict outcomes through the propagation of probabilities. Bayesian networks have become intuitive, precise, and widely-used tools for decision-making under uncertainty.”

The importance of knowing how to infer causal relations between two phenomena cannot be overstated. It is a challenge for humans too, as Judea Pearl explains: “Causal relationships have been a very tough obstacle for both man and machine to handle because we do not have the language to capture the idea that the rooster’s crow does not cause the sun to rise, even though it comes before the sunrise and constantly predicts it.”

In his book Causality, published in 2002, Pearl introduced the world to causal calculus, which provides a formal framework for inferring causal relationships from data. “This enables us to understand how to predict the effect of interventions on outcomes,” the citation reads. “Pearl developed a mathematical language for distinguishing between causal relations and spurious correlations.”

Applications of the mathematization of causality

Getting machines to successfully detect causal relationships can unlock multiple applications. “Now we have a language to do that, so we can insert the knowledge that we have about the world and infer coherently as we do in algebra,” Pearls elaborates. “We infer the conclusion and the conclusion is proven to be correct if the assumptions are correct. The applications go from personalized medicine to handling an epidemic like COVID, putting together a variety of information sources from various parts of various countries, and coming out with a coherent conclusion based on the evidence that we have.”

On this point, Larrañaga relates how his team has supported health centers during the pandemic by applying Bayesian networks to decisions on which patient should be intubated, and in predicting the course of the disease: whether ICU admission would be required, or the length of hospitalization.

The BBVA Foundation centers its activity on the promotion of world-class scientific research and cultural creation and the recognition of talent.

The BBVA Foundation Frontiers of Knowledge Awards recognize and reward contributions of singular impact in science, technology, the humanities, and music, privileging those that significantly enlarge the stock of knowledge in a discipline, open up new fields, or build bridges between disciplinary areas. The goal of the awards, established in 2008, is to celebrate and promote the value of knowledge as a public good without frontiers, the best instrument at our command to take on the great global challenges of our time and expand the worldviews of individuals in a way that benefits all of humanity. Their eight categories address the knowledge map of the 21st century, from basic knowledge to fields devoted to understanding and interrelating the natural environment by way of closely connected domains such as biology and medicine or economics, information technologies, social sciences, and the humanities, and the universal art of music. They come with 400,000 euros in each of their eight categories, along with a diploma and a commemorative artwork created by artist Blanca Muñoz.

The BBVA Foundation has been aided from the outset in the evaluation of nominees for the Frontiers Award in Information and Communication Technologies by the Spanish National Research Council (CSIC), the country’s premier public research organization. CSIC appoints evaluation support panels made up of leading experts in the corresponding knowledge area, who are charged with undertaking an initial assessment of the candidates proposed by numerous institutions across the world, and drawing up a reasoned shortlist for the consideration of the award committees. CSIC is also responsible for designating each committee’s chair and participates in the selection of its members, thus helping to ensure objectivity in the recognition of innovation and scientific excellence.

UK scientists build a global repository for cell engineering

A cloud-based repository that creates a digital fingerprint of engineered microorganisms has been successfully trialed. Dr Jonathan Tellechea, a synthetic biologist, in the lob while working on the project.  CREDIT Professor Natalio Krasnogor/Newcastle University, UK

An international team led by Newcastle University has launched CellRepo, a species and strain database that uses cell barcodes to monitor and track engineered organisms. In a new study, the database keeps track of and organizes the digital data produced during cell engineering. It also molecularly links that data to the associated living samples.

Available globally, this resource supports international collaboration and has significant safety advantages, such as limiting the impact of deliberately or accidentally released genetically modified microorganisms by enabling faster tracing of organisms' lab of origin and design details.  

CellRepo is built on version control, a concept from software engineering that records and tracks changes to software code. The scientists believe that version control for cell engineering will make engineering biology more open, reproducible, easier to trace and share, and more trustworthy.

The research team highlights additional benefits of this community resource, such as traceability – providing the exact documentation for a strain and properly crediting laboratory work. The database also puts responsibility in focus by making it easier to track and assign ownership.

With access to a global database, researchers will be able to reproduce results and collaborate more easily. The scientists also argue that the repository will improve transparency and reduce costs associated with data and source code losses.   

Lead author, Natalio Krasnogor, Professor of Computer Science and Synthetic Biology at Newcastle University’s School of Computing, said: “Engineering biology is not rocket science. It is much, much harder. And because of that, it is imperative that we do it more openly and more collaboratively. CellRepo, at its core, is a collaboration platform in which cell engineers can document their work and share it with others (within their lab or more widely). By enabling more collaboration and the seamless sharing of engineered strains we hope to accelerate and improve synthetic biology processes and reporting for everybody. CellRepo is a community resource and as such we invite engineering biologists, synthetic biologists, biotechnologies, and life scientists more generally to try it and get in touch with us so we know what works and what needs to be improved!”

Dr. Jonathan Tellechea, a synthetic biologist in the project says:

"I have always had some misidentification issues during my projects. Fortunately, I was able to find them early on and solve them but I can’t imagine how many good projects have failed or stalled because of this.  Some other chunk of my time as a biologist goes into retroactively building the history of the plasmids and strains I use. I may get the genetic material from someone, but who was the original author? Sometimes I am lucky and it is just one paper away, sometimes it's down a rabbit hole that may end up in the 80s. CellRepo fixes these and other important problems for experimentalists. "

Leanne Hobbs, the senior software engineer in the project reflects: "As a software engineer coming from industry to academia, it has been both a challenge and pleasure to work on a project where I can use my skills for the public good. Version control is a staple of software engineering and I am proud that we are now bringing these tools to engineering biology".

Dr. Lenka Pelechova, a social scientist working at The Interdisciplinary Computing and Complex Biosystems (ICOS) research group, added: “As a social scientist, I believe the Responsible Research and Innovation framework is crucial in addressing societal expectations and in opening up public's conversations about new research and technology. In my view, these conversations should start early on and CellRepo supports this by making research transparent from its onset.'

Study co-author, Professor Víctor de Lorenzo, from the Systems and Synthetic Biology Program at the Centro Nacional de Biotecnología in Madrid, Spain, said: “Given the innate tendency of engineered constructs to mutate and overcome any type of genetic firewall, decades of efforts for containment of recombinant bacteria have delivered few practical results. Instead, CellRepo offers stable and unequivocal identification of given strains that can be rigorously tracked and associated to digital twins with all information available—should it be required for countermeasures, ownership or liability purposes.”

Elena Velázquez, PhD student in Víctor de Lorenzo’s lab, added:

“As a synthetic biologist who works all day with plasmids and strains from different origins, I am used to finding that the plasmid or strain I was using in my experiments was not what I requested. This, of course, cannot be blamed on scientists who kindly donate their hard work altruistically and, moreover, since there was not an easy way to label and identify if the strain at stake was the intended one.

“CellRepo is a platform that represents an incredible advance in this matter and that can save a ton of time and useless work to researchers all around the world. Moreover, the global repositories of strains that are to be shared through this platform can be an invaluable open-source of samples and a bridge for new collaborations between different labs. Thanks to CellRepo, scientists have the possibility to speed up their investigations and the reliability of their Science.”

Co-author Simon Woods, Professor of Bioethics at the Policy Ethics and Life Sciences Research Centre, Newcastle University, added: “The wide adoption of the CellRepo platform will make a major beneficial contribution to the culture of science by providing a mechanism that ensures traceability and transparency and enabling reproducibility. In addition, CellRepo is a novel instrument of science governance that supports responsible but innovative science.”

Cambridge wins €1.9m to stop AI undermining 'core human values'

Artificial intelligence is transforming society as algorithms increasingly dictate access to jobs and insurance, justice, medical treatments, as well as our daily interactions with friends and family. 

As these technologies race ahead, we are starting to see unintended social consequences: algorithms that promote everything from racial bias in healthcare to misinformation eroding faith in democracies.   

Researchers at the University of Cambridge’s Leverhulme Centre for the Future of Intelligence (LCFI) have now been awarded nearly two million Euros to build a better understanding of how AI can undermine “core human values”.

The grant will allow LCFI and its partners to work with the AI industry to develop anti-discriminatory design principles that put ethics at the heart of technological progress. 

The LCFI team will create toolkits and training for AI developers to prevent existing structural inequalities – from gender to class and race – from becoming embedded into emerging technology, and sending such social injustices into hyperdrive.      

The donation, from the German philanthropic foundation Stiftung Mercator, is part of a package of close to €4 million that will see the Cambridge team – including social scientists and philosophers as well as technology designers – working with the University of Bonn.   

The new research project, “Desirable Digitalisation: Rethinking AI for Just and Sustainable Futures”, comes as the European Commission negotiates its Artificial Intelligence Act, which has ambitions to ensure AI becomes more “trustworthy” and “human-centric”. The Act will require AI systems to be assessed for their impact on fundamental rights and values. 

“There is a huge knowledge gap,” said Dr. Stephen Cave, Director of LCFI. “No one currently knows what the impact of these new systems will be on core values, from democratic rights to the rights of minorities, or what measures will help address such threats.” 

“Understanding the potential impact of algorithms on human dignity will mean going beyond the code and drawing on lessons from history and political science,” Cave said.

LCFI made the headlines last year when it launched the world’s only Master's program dedicated to teaching AI ethics to industry professionals. This grant will allow it to develop new research strands, such as investigations of human dignity in the “digital age”. “AI technologies are leaving the door open for dangerous and long-discredited pseudoscience,” said Cave. 

He points to facial recognition software that claims to identify “criminal faces”, arguing such assertions are akin to Victorian ideas of phrenology – that a person’s character could be detected by skull shape – and associated scientific racism.  

Dr. Kanta Dihal, who will co-lead the project, is to investigate whose voices shape society’s visions of a future with AI. “Currently our ideas of AI around the world are conjured by Hollywood and a small rich elite,” she said. 

The LCFI team will include Cambridge researchers Dr. Kerry Mackereth and Dr. Eleanor Drage, co-hosts of the podcast “The Good Robot”, which explores whether or not we can have ‘good’ technology and why feminism matters in the tech space.  

Mackereth will be working on a project that explores the relationship between anti-Asian racism and AI, while Drage will be looking at the use of AI for recruitment and workforce management. 

"AI tools are going to revolutionize hiring and shape the future of work in the 21st century. Now that millions of workers are exposed to these tools, we need to make sure that they do justice to each candidate, and don’t perpetuate the racist pseudoscience of 19th-century hiring practices,” says Drage. 

“It’s great that governments are now taking action to ensure AI is developed responsibly,” said Cave. “But legislation won’t mean much unless we really understand how these technologies are impacting on fundamental human rights and values.”

Cavendish physicists show that it is possible to coax the behavior of quantum particles set in motion

In the world of fundamental particles, you are either a fermion or a boson but a new study from the University of Cambridge shows, for the first time, that one can behave like the other as they move from one place to another. Left: The particles start out as bosons and move together (solid lines) left and right before impinging on a 0-π; border, where they are partially reflected (solid lines) and partially split (dotted lines). For each splitting, one particle escapes the bosonic region. Right: Starting as pseudo-fermions, the particles move in a “superposition” of two ways: in one, they rapidly move apart as ordinary fermions and pass straight through the π-0 borders (dotted lines); in the other, they are bound together, move very slowly, and are forever trapped in the fermionic region (solid lines).  CREDIT Lau and Dutta

Researchers from the Cavendish Laboratory have modeled a quantum walk of identical particles that can change their fundamental character by simply hopping across a domain wall in a one-dimensional lattice.

Their findings, published as a Letter in Physical Review Research, open up a window to engineer and control new kinds of collective motion in the quantum world.

All known fundamental particles fall in two groups: either a fermion (“matter particle”) or a boson (“force carrier”), depending on how their state is affected when two particles are exchanged. This “exchange statistics” strongly affects their behavior, with fermions (electrons) giving rise to the periodic table of elements and bosons (photons) leading to electromagnetic radiation, energy, and light.

In this new study, the theoretical physicists show that, by applying an effective magnetic field that varies in space and with the particle density, it is possible to coax the same particles to behave as bosons in one region and (pseudo)fermions in another. The boundaries separating these regions are invisible to every single particle and, yet, dramatically alter their collective motion, leading to striking phenomena such as particles getting trapped or fragmenting into many wave packets.

“Everything that we see around us is made up of either bosons or fermions. These two groups behave and move completely differently: bosons try to bunch together whereas fermions try to stay separate,” explained first author Liam L.H. Lau, who carried out this research during his undergraduate studies at the Cavendish Laboratory and is now a graduate student at Rutgers University.

"The question we asked was what if the particles could change their character as they moved around on a one-dimensional lattice, our notion of space.”

This research is partly motivated by the remarkable prospects of being able to control the nature of particles in the laboratory. In particular, certain two-dimensional materials have been found to host particle-like excitations that are in between bosons and fermions – called “anyons” – which could be used to build robust quantum supercomputers. However, in all setups so far, the nature of the particles is fixed and cannot be changed in space or time.

By analyzing mathematical models, the present study shows how one can juxtapose bosonic, fermionic, and even “anyonic” spatial domains in the same physical system, and explores how two particles can move in surprising ways through these different regions.

“The boundaries separating these regions are very special, because they are transparent to single particles and, yet, control the final distribution by how they reflect or transmit two particles arriving together!” said Lau. The researchers illustrate this “many-body” effect by studying different arrangements of the spatial domains, which give rise to strikingly different collective motion of the two particles.

“These variable two-particle interferences are fascinating in their own rights, but the new questions they open up for many particles are even more exciting,” said Dr. Shovan Dutta, the study’s co-author who conceived and supervised the research in the Cavendish and has recently moved to the Max Planck Institute for the Physics of Complex Systems.

“Our work builds on recent progress in engineering artificial magnetic fields for neutral atoms, and the predictions can be tested experimentally in existing optical-lattice setups,” added Dutta. “This will open access to a rich class of controllable many-particle dynamics and, potentially, technological applications, including in quantum sensing.”

Woolpert provides advanced planning, technical services for Broward County (Fla.) airports

The $5 million multi-year contract includes airport modeling solutions, geospatial technology, and UAS integration.

Woolpert was selected by the Broward County Aviation Department (BCAD) to provide advanced planning, consulting, and technical services for Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport and North Perry Airport. The $5 million, multi-year contract will support geospatial solutions, dynamic planning and development management, advanced air mobility, and general airport planning solutions.

Woolpert will provide a wide range of planning, technology, and geospatial services. These include enterprise geospatial applications, unmanned aircraft systems integration, building information modeling, and FAA Airports GIS Program support. New projects and procedures will be implemented to help BCAD stay compliant through the Airport Data and Information Portal process for new and ongoing construction projects.

Woolpert Aviation Program Director and Senior Associate Ed Copeland said the goal is to look for ways to enhance and more fully integrate existing systems and databases to create additional efficiencies and lower costs, while at the same time evaluating new technologies and concepts to support and advance the full life cycle of planning and engineering through construction, operations and maintenance specific to the BCAD environment.

“In addition to providing on-call and on-site staff extension support, this contract will help Broward County develop a UAS program that includes a framework and protocols for AAM that will best support their evolving airport operations,” Copeland said. “These advanced planning and technical services will enable BCAD to implement a strategic plan for the next five years, ensuring the county and its residents benefit from these rapidly developing technologies and are well-positioned for the future of aviation.”

This contract is now underway.