The well-known computer scientist Fei-Fei Li dubbed the “godmother of AI,” founded a company called World Labs. According to the Financial Times, its worth has already surpassed $1 billion in just four months.
Reuters stated in May that World Labs aims to enable AI to be capable of advanced thinking by using human-like processing of visual input. Much like ChatGPT is attempting to achieve with generative AI, research is still being done to make it human-like.
Li is primarily recognized for her contributions to computer vision, an area of artificial intelligence that aids in the interpretation and comprehension of visual data by machines. She also oversaw the creation of ImageNet, a sizable visual database that is employed in studies on visual object recognition. Li led Google Cloud’s AI from 2017 to 2018 and is presently providing AI advice to the White House task force.
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An unnamed venture entrepreneur familiar with Li’s work told the Financial Times that “[World Labs] is developing a model that understands the three-dimensional physical world; essentially the dimensions of objects, where things are, and what they do.”
The business is supported by Andreessen Horowitz and Radical Ventures, an AI fund that Li joined as a partner last year. It has completed two investment rounds, the most recent of which was for approximately $100 million. While on a leave of absence from Stanford, where she co-directs the Human-Centered AI Institute, Li launched World Labs.
Using a concept known as “spatial intelligence,” Li further described the area of research her startup will work on advancing in a Ted Talk in April. This area involves algorithms that can realistically extrapolate images and text into three-dimensional environments and act on those predictions.
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This could support research in several domains, including computer vision, augmented reality, virtual reality, and robotics. The potential for these talents to progress in the ambitious manner Li envisions might revolutionize sectors such as manufacturing and healthcare.
The World Labs investment is indicative of a trend in which venture investors are willing to support ambitious artificial intelligence firms. This movement has been sparked by OpenAI’s ChatGPT, which unexpectedly became quite successful and quickly reached a valuation of more than $80 billion.
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