Massive Danish investment in artificial intelligence research

Friday 09 Apr 21
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Contact

Lars Kai Hansen
Professor, head of section
DTU Compute
+45 45 25 38 89

About the centre

  • The pioneer centre is expected to open in late 2021 under the leadership of the University of Copenhagen
  •  Professor Serge Belongie has been appointed as the director of the centre (Serge Belongie was also appointed as Honorary Professor at DTU in 2018)
  • DKK 352.4 million is the highest possible grant from the Danish National Research Foundation, the Novo Nordisk Foundation, the Carlsberg Foundation, VILLUM FONDEN and the Lundbeck Foundation—of which approx. DKK 100 m is expected to go to DTU.
  • Researchers from Aalborg University, Aarhus University, DTU, the IT University and the University of Copenhagen will be affiliated with the centre
  • The purpose of the pioneering centre is to establish excellent research units that can perform basic research aimed at solving major challenges in society
  • The pioneering centre aims to create societal impact in 10 areas: Biotech, life and health sciences, climate and biodiversity monitoring, health care equality, education, economic growth and entrepreneurship, crisis assistance, information verification and validation, energy and infrastructure, security, ethics and legal protection, public sector and social field
  • The seven research groups at the centre will be dealing with the sub-areas: Causality and explainability, extended reality, fine-grained analysis, learning theory and optimization, signals and decoding, speech and language, and networks and graphs.

A new pioneer centre for artificial intelligence (AI) research that is expected to open in late 2021 could be the largest Danish venture into AI research ever.

The Danish National Research Foundation, the Carlsberg Foundation, the Novo Nordisk Foundation, the Lundbeck Foundation and VILLUM Fonden are currently conducting contract negotiations with Danish universities about the setting-up of the largest AI research centre in Denmark so far.

And with the support of a potential DKK 352 million and the participation of DTU, Aalborg University, Aarhus University, the IT University and the University of Copenhagen (host), there is reason to expect that the new pioneer centre will be the most ambitious investment in artificial intelligence research in Denmark.

The plan is for the centre to secure Denmark a leading position in AI and the focus will be on solving the major challenges facing society in the interface between people, sustainability and technology. This is achieved by attracting top researchers from around the world and creating international research environments in areas such as machine learning, computer vision and virtual reality—and with a focus on ethical aspects of AI and on design technologies based on artificial intelligence that can be accepted and understood by the users.

”DTU has a strong focus on Safe AI, and it has also become a key element of the vision for the new centre,” explains Professor Lars Kai Hansen, DTU Compute, who has been DTU’s representative in the working group that formulated the centre’s research plans.

However, this will not be DTU’s only contribution. DTU’s strong basic research environments in AI and applications in biomedicine and health, climate change and biodiversity monitoring as well as energy and infrastructure will be able to deliver specific solutions to some of the major challenges in international society today.

”Our aim at DTU, is human centered AI guided by the needs and requirements of society, and we look forward to create a pioneer centre that will contribute to better treatment at our hospitals and support the green transition of the Danish society,” explains Lars Kai Hansen.

Possibility of growth engine with international profile
According to the plan, the centre will be headed by the University of Copenhagen and the American AI top scientist, Serge Belongie, who is currently Professor and Associate Dean at Cornell Tech University, USA. Belongie’s international profile and focus on business relations are in line with DTU’s, and the provost at DTU, Rasmus Larsen, therefore also anticipates that a pioneer centre headed by the right international profile will deliver tangible results:

”It’s very good news that the first Danish AI pioneer centre will be led by an international capability. Basic AI research is applied so quickly that such a pioneering centre will be able to contribute to create new businesses and deliver innovation in existing businesses—thereby helping to create growth and prosperity. The access to AI talents is also a major barrier for Danish businesses. Therefore, I am pleased that with the anchoring in five universities we will also be able to strengthen a range of university study programmes.”

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