Last Friday (7th September, 2018), DARPA announced a multi-year investment of more than $2 billion in a new program called the ‘AI Next’ campaign. DARPA’s Agency director, Dr. Steven Walker, officially unveiled the large-scale effort during D60, DARPA’s 60th Anniversary Symposium held in Maryland.
This campaign seeks contextual reasoning in AI systems in order to create deeper trust and collaborative partnerships between humans and machines.
In the conference, DARPA officials also described the next frontier of neuroscience research: technologies for able-bodied soldiers that give them super abilities. Following this, they introduced the Next-Generation Nonsurgical Neurotechnology (N3) program, which was announced in March. This program aims at funding research on tech that can transmit high-fidelity signals between the brain and some external machine without requiring that the user is cut open for rewiring or implantation.
Al Emondi, manager of N3, said to IEEE Spectrum that he is currently picking researchers who will be funded under the program and can expect an announcement in early 2019.
The program has two tracks:
Justin Sanchez, director of DARPA’s Biological Technologies Office, said that making brain tech easy to use will open the floodgates. He added, “We can imagine a future of how this tech will be used. But this will let millions of people imagine their own futures”.
To know more about the AI Next Campaign and the N3 program in detail, visit DARPA blog.
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