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    IBM, U. of Michigan Creating Chatty Computer

    Written by

    Darryl K. Taft
    Published January 17, 2016
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      How would you like to have a conversation with your computer to plan your vacation or to do your taxes, or literally hold a discussion with your car about the best way to get home through traffic? Well, if a new project from IBM and the University of Michigan goes as planned, that may not be so far off.

      Sure, it is possible to “talk” to PCs, cars, smartphones and other devices today, but the interaction is limited to rote question and answering. What the University of Michigan and IBM have in mind is the ability to hold real conversations with these systems “on human terms,” the university said.

      The University of Michigan and IBM have launched a $4.5 million collaboration to develop a new class of conversational technologies that will enable people to interact more naturally and effectively with computers. The multiyear partnership is expected to usher in the next frontier of artificial intelligence (AI)-based dialog management that will transform human-machine communication.

      Indeed, in an effort known as Project Sapphire, IBM and the University of Michigan Artificial Intelligence Lab will develop a cognitive system that functions as an academic advisor for undergraduate computer science and engineering majors at the university. The system will enable researchers to explore how smart machines interact with people in goal-driven dialogues.

      To do this, the team will capture and annotate large volumes of approved recorded human-to-human conversations between undergraduates and their advisors on topics such as course selection, career advice, extracurricular recommendations and homework resources. The researchers in the student advisor project will have access to transcripts of thousands of counseling sessions between students and human advisors, wrote Steve Hamm, IBM chief storyteller, in a blog post on the project. The team will use these conversations to train the system on how to respond to interactions with students, and ultimately learn how to automatically navigate and successfully reply in conversations with those using the system.

      “Human-to-machine interactions, similar to human-to-human conversations, are rarely confined to one question and one answer,” said David Nahamoo, IBM fellow and chief technologist for conversational systems on the IBM Watson team, in a statement. “They involve multiple turns of a conversation with responses that can be imprecise and unclear, making it difficult to simulate the human experience. By partnering with the University of Michigan, we have an enormous opportunity to apply AI technologies in new ways and transform human-machine communication. This collaboration marks the next chapter in a longstanding relationship between the University and IBM to place the power of cognitive technologies into the hands of the next generation of thinkers.”

      Moreover, unlike rules-based interactive virtual assistant systems that are programmed with hard-coded responses and scripted replies, Project Sapphire will apply probabilistic and statistical methods of reasoning that understand conditions and context, IBM said. By employing deep learning, machine learning, reinforcement learning, natural language understanding, knowledge representation, emotion analysis and software technologies, the cognitive system will be trained using the recorded human-to-human conversations and will continue to learn and improve with increased interaction.

      “Natural conversations bring in so many different aspects of human intelligence—knowledge, context, goals and emotion, for instance. In many ways, to build a versatile conversational system is a grand challenge for artificial intelligence,” said Satinder Singh Baveja, professor of computer science and engineering and director of the University of Michigan’s AI Lab, in a statement. “We look forward to taking it on with this partnership.”

      IBM, U. of Michigan Creating Chatty Computer

      Emotion will be a key consideration of the system, as human interaction often turns on emotional elements. For instance, the proposed system would record its conversations with students and at any point it could hand the session over to a human. One of the researchers involved—Emily Mower Provost, assistant professor of computer science and engineering, studies emotional cues. She will work on enabling Project Sapphire to recognize when students need a real shoulder to lean on, even if they’re not asking for one.

      Through the partnership, eight computer science and engineering faculty members, along with graduate students and postdoctoral researchers, will work with IBM scientists. Within the next couple years, they expect their system to be up and running.

      IBM said the digital advisor is not meant to replace human professionals who guide students along the academic and emotional journey that is college. Once it’s developed, students can choose to talk to the system for simple or routine questions, or to complement a meeting with a person.

      Students might tell the system their preferences and receive course recommendations that advance them toward their degree. They could define broad career goals and get a good list of electives. They could hear an estimate of how many homework hours their class load might require, or be directed to extracurricular activities that might help them land the kind of job or graduate school placement they seek.

      However, the automated academic advisor is one application of what the team envisions to be a platform technology, IBM said. Project Sapphire’s resulting innovations could be embedded into cognitive systems across many industries to improve how they learn and codify human expertise, understand a user’s intent and context, and deliver appropriate responses that direct conversations toward a stated goal.

      “What we are building has the potential to revolutionize how we interact with our computers and other devices such as our cars and our appliances,” Baveja said. “These conversational systems become cognitive advisors that can assist us in a variety of personal, professional, and enterprise tasks such as advising for personal finance, helping employees in scheduling meetings and travel arrangement, and providing technical support to customers of an enterprise.”

      IBM’s Hamm wrote: “The researchers will use the cognitive student advisor as a test bed to help them develop systems that can be used for many kinds of human-to-machine interactions—everything from online travel planning and shopping to IT help desks and tax advisory services.”

      IBM noted that the University of Michigan students are excited to work with Big Blue on a potentially groundbreaking project.

      “I want to build something that will not only benefit students, but will also benefit their children,” said Ananda Narayan, a University of Michigan doctoral student studying reinforcement learning. “This is the future and it is happening here at the University of Michigan.”

      IBM said Project Sapphire is but another step forward in IBM’s history of innovation in conversational systems. Most recently, IBM added its latest dialog management capabilities to its Watson cognitive computing platform.

      The University of Michigan and IBM have a history of collaboration. IBM has assisted with cognitive computing courses, worked with the university to discover new ways to apply Watson, and enabled the University of Michigan Solar Car Team to use cognitive solar forecasting technology to predict solar radiation and cloud movement during the 2015 World Solar Challenge.

      Darryl K. Taft
      Darryl K. Taft
      Darryl K. Taft covers the development tools and developer-related issues beat from his office in Baltimore. He has more than 10 years of experience in the business and is always looking for the next scoop. Taft is a member of the Association for Computing Machinery (ACM) and was named 'one of the most active middleware reporters in the world' by The Middleware Co. He also has his own card in the 'Who's Who in Enterprise Java' deck.

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