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  • Let me show you something.

  • (Video) Girl: Okay, that's a cat sitting in a bed.

  • The boy is petting the elephant.

  • Those are people that are going on an airplane.

  • That's a big airplane.

  • Fei-Fei Li: This is a three-year-old child

  • describing what she sees in a series of photos.

  • She might still have a lot to learn about this world,

  • but she's already an expert at one very important task:

  • to make sense of what she sees.

  • Our society is more technologically advanced than ever.

  • We send people to the moon, we make phones that talk to us

  • or customize radio stations that can play only music we like.

  • Yet, our most advanced machines and computers

  • still struggle at this task.

  • So I'm here today to give you a progress report

  • on the latest advances in our research in computer vision,

  • one of the most frontier and potentially revolutionary

  • technologies in computer science.

  • Yes, we have prototyped cars that can drive by themselves,

  • but without smart vision, they cannot really tell the difference

  • between a crumpled paper bag on the road, which can be run over,

  • and a rock that size, which should be avoided.

  • We have made fabulous megapixel cameras,

  • but we have not delivered sight to the blind.

  • Drones can fly over massive land,

  • but don't have enough vision technology

  • to help us to track the changes of the rainforests.

  • Security cameras are everywhere,

  • but they do not alert us when a child is drowning in a swimming pool.

  • Photos and videos are becoming an integral part of global life.

  • They're being generated at a pace that's far beyond what any human,

  • or teams of humans, could hope to view,

  • and you and I are contributing to that at this TED.

  • Yet our most advanced software is still struggling at understanding

  • and managing this enormous content.

  • So in other words, collectively as a society,

  • we're very much blind,

  • because our smartest machines are still blind.

  • "Why is this so hard?" you may ask.

  • Cameras can take pictures like this one

  • by converting lights into a two-dimensional array of numbers

  • known as pixels,

  • but these are just lifeless numbers.

  • They do not carry meaning in themselves.

  • Just like to hear is not the same as to listen,

  • to take pictures is not the same as to see,

  • and by seeing, we really mean understanding.

  • In fact, it took Mother Nature 540 million years of hard work

  • to do this task,

  • and much of that effort

  • went into developing the visual processing apparatus of our brains,

  • not the eyes themselves.

  • So vision begins with the eyes,

  • but it truly takes place in the brain.

  • So for 15 years now, starting from my Ph.D. at Caltech

  • and then leading Stanford's Vision Lab,

  • I've been working with my mentors, collaborators and students

  • to teach computers to see.

  • Our research field is called computer vision and machine learning.

  • It's part of the general field of artificial intelligence.

  • So ultimately, we want to teach the machines to see just like we do:

  • naming objects, identifying people, inferring 3D geometry of things,

  • understanding relations, emotions, actions and intentions.

  • You and I weave together entire stories of people, places and things

  • the moment we lay our gaze on them.

  • The first step towards this goal is to teach a computer to see objects,

  • the building block of the visual world.

  • In its simplest terms, imagine this teaching process

  • as showing the computers some training images

  • of a particular object, let's say cats,

  • and designing a model that learns from these training images.

  • How hard can this be?

  • After all, a cat is just a collection of shapes and colors,

  • and this is what we did in the early days of object modeling.

  • We'd tell the computer algorithm in a mathematical language

  • that a cat has a round face, a chubby body,

  • two pointy ears, and a long tail,

  • and that looked all fine.

  • But what about this cat?

  • (Laughter)

  • It's all curled up.

  • Now you have to add another shape and viewpoint to the object model.

  • But what if cats are hidden?

  • What about these silly cats?

  • Now you get my point.

  • Even something as simple as a household pet

  • can present an infinite number of variations to the object model,

  • and that's just one object.

  • So about eight years ago,

  • a very simple and profound observation changed my thinking.

  • No one tells a child how to see,

  • especially in the early years.

  • They learn this through real-world experiences and examples.

  • If you consider a child's eyes

  • as a pair of biological cameras,

  • they take one picture about every 200 milliseconds,

  • the average time an eye movement is made.

  • So by age three, a child would have seen hundreds of millions of pictures

  • of the real world.

  • That's a lot of training examples.

  • So instead of focusing solely on better and better algorithms,

  • my insight was to give the algorithms the kind of training data

  • that a child was given through experiences

  • in both quantity and quality.

  • Once we know this,

  • we knew we needed to collect a data set

  • that has far more images than we have ever had before,

  • perhaps thousands of times more,

  • and together with Professor Kai Li at Princeton University,

  • we launched the ImageNet project in 2007.

  • Luckily, we didn't have to mount a camera on our head

  • and wait for many years.

  • We went to the Internet,

  • the biggest treasure trove of pictures that humans have ever created.

  • We downloaded nearly a billion images

  • and used crowdsourcing technology like the Amazon Mechanical Turk platform

  • to help us to label these images.

  • At its peak, ImageNet was one of the biggest employers

  • of the Amazon Mechanical Turk workers:

  • together, almost 50,000 workers

  • from 167 countries around the world

  • helped us to clean, sort and label

  • nearly a billion candidate images.

  • That was how much effort it took

  • to capture even a fraction of the imagery

  • a child's mind takes in in the early developmental years.

  • In hindsight, this idea of using big data

  • to train computer algorithms may seem obvious now,

  • but back in 2007, it was not so obvious.

  • We were fairly alone on this journey for quite a while.

  • Some very friendly colleagues advised me to do something more useful for my tenure,

  • and we were constantly struggling for research funding.

  • Once, I even joked to my graduate students

  • that I would just reopen my dry cleaner's shop to fund ImageNet.

  • After all, that's how I funded my college years.

  • So we carried on.

  • In 2009, the ImageNet project delivered

  • a database of 15 million images

  • across 22,000 classes of objects and things

  • organized by everyday English words.

  • In both quantity and quality,

  • this was an unprecedented scale.

  • As an example, in the case of cats,

  • we have more than 62,000 cats

  • of all kinds of looks and poses

  • and across all species of domestic and wild cats.

  • We were thrilled to have put together ImageNet,

  • and we wanted the whole research world to benefit from it,

  • so in the TED fashion, we opened up the entire data set

  • to the worldwide research community for free.

  • (Applause)

  • Now that we have the data to nourish our computer brain,

  • we're ready to come back to the algorithms themselves.

  • As it turned out, the wealth of information provided by ImageNet

  • was a perfect match to a particular class of machine learning algorithms

  • called convolutional neural network,

  • pioneered by Kunihiko Fukushima, Geoff Hinton, and Yann LeCun

  • back in the 1970s and '80s.

  • Just like the brain consists of billions of highly connected neurons,

  • a basic operating unit in a neural network

  • is a neuron-like node.

  • It takes input from other nodes

  • and sends output to others.

  • Moreover, these hundreds of thousands or even millions of nodes

  • are organized in hierarchical layers,

  • also similar to the brain.

  • In a typical neural network we use to train our object recognition model,

  • it has 24 million nodes,

  • 140 million parameters,

  • and 15 billion connections.

  • That's an enormous model.

  • Powered by the massive data from ImageNet

  • and the modern CPUs and GPUs to train such a humongous model,

  • the convolutional neural network

  • blossomed in a way that no one expected.

  • It became the winning architecture

  • to generate exciting new results in object recognition.

  • This is a computer telling us

  • this picture contains a cat

  • and where the cat is.

  • Of course there are more things than cats,

  • so here's a computer algorithm telling us

  • the picture contains a boy and a teddy bear;

  • a dog, a person, and a small kite in the background;

  • or a picture of very busy things

  • like a man, a skateboard, railings, a lampost, and so on.

  • Sometimes, when the computer is not so confident about what it sees,

  • we have taught it to be smart enough

  • to give us a safe answer instead of committing too much,

  • just like we would do,

  • but other times our computer algorithm is remarkable at telling us

  • what exactly the objects are,

  • like the make, model, year of the cars.

  • We applied this algorithm to millions of Google Street View images

  • across hundreds of American cities,

  • and we have learned something really interesting:

  • first, it confirmed our common wisdom

  • that car prices correlate very well

  • with household incomes.

  • But surprisingly, car prices also correlate well

  • with crime rates in cities,

  • or voting patterns by zip codes.

  • So wait a minute. Is that it?

  • Has the computer already matched or even surpassed human capabilities?

  • Not so fast.

  • So far, we have just taught the computer to see objects.

  • This is like a small child learning to utter a few nouns.

  • It's an incredible accomplishment,

  • but it's only the first step.

  • Soon, another developmental milestone will be hit,

  • and children begin to communicate in sentences.

  • So instead of saying this is a cat in the picture,

  • you already heard the little girl telling us this is a cat lying on a bed.

  • So to teach a computer to see a picture and generate sentences,

  • the marriage between big data and machine learning algorithm

  • has to take another step.

  • Now, the computer has to learn from both pictures

  • as well as natural language sentences

  • generated by humans.

  • Just like the brain integrates vision and language,

  • we developed a model that connects parts of visual things

  • like visual snippets

  • with words and phrases in sentences.

  • About four months ago,

  • we finally tied all this together

  • and produced one of the first computer vision models

  • that is capable of generating a human-like sentence

  • when it sees a picture for the first time.

  • Now, I'm ready to show you what the computer says

  • when it sees the picture

  • that the little girl saw at the beginning of this talk.

  • (Video) Computer: A man is standing next to an elephant.

  • A large airplane sitting on top of an airport runway.

  • FFL: Of course, we're still working hard to improve our algorithms,

  • and it still has a lot to learn.

  • (Applause)

  • And the computer still makes mistakes.

  • (Video) Computer: A cat lying on a bed in a blanket.

  • FFL: So of course, when it sees too many cats,

  • it thinks everything might look like a cat.

  • (Video) Computer: A young boy is holding a baseball bat.

  • (Laughter)

  • FFL: Or, if it hasn't seen a toothbrush, it confuses it with a baseball bat.

  • (Video) Computer: A man riding a horse down a street next to a building.

  • (Laughter)

  • FFL: We haven't taught Art 101 to the computers.

  • (Video) Computer: A zebra standing in a field of grass.

  • FFL: And it hasn't learned to appreciate the stunning beauty of nature

  • like you and I do.

  • So it has been a long journey.

  • To get from age zero to three was hard.

  • The real challenge is to go from three to 13 and far beyond.

  • Let me remind you with this picture of the boy and the cake again.

  • So far, we have taught the computer to see objects

  • or even tell us a simple story when seeing a picture.

  • (Video) Computer: A person sitting at a table with a cake.

  • FFL: But there's so much more to this picture

  • than just a person and a cake.

  • What the computer doesn't see is that this is a special Italian cake

  • that's only served during Easter time.

  • The boy is wearing his favorite t-shirt

  • given to him as a gift by his father after a trip to Sydney,

  • and you and I can all tell how happy he is

  • and what's exactly on his mind at that moment.

  • This is my son Leo.

  • On my quest for visual intelligence,

  • I think of Leo constantly

  • and the future world he will live in.

  • When machines can see,

  • doctors and nurses will have extra pairs of tireless eyes

  • to help them to diagnose and take care of patients.

  • Cars will run smarter and safer on the road.

  • Robots, not just humans,

  • will help us to brave the disaster zones to save the trapped and wounded.

  • We will discover new species, better materials,

  • and explore unseen frontiers with the help of the machines.

  • Little by little, we're giving sight to the machines.

  • First, we teach them to see.

  • Then, they help us to see better.

  • For the first time, human eyes won't be the only ones

  • pondering and exploring our world.

  • We will not only use the machines for their intelligence,

  • we will also collaborate with them in ways that we cannot even imagine.

  • This is my quest:

  • to give computers visual intelligence

  • and to create a better future for Leo and for the world.

  • Thank you.

  • (Applause)

Let me show you something.

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