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IBM’s Watson to Join Research Team at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
Rensselaer is the First University to Receive a
Version of the IBM Watson System; Project Focuses on Big Data
Research and New Uses for Watson Technology
IBM (NYSE: IBM) today announced it will provide a modified
version of an IBM Watson system to Rensselaer Polytechnic
Institute, making it the first university to receive such a
system. The arrival of the Watson system will enable new
leading-edge research at Rensselaer, and afford faculty and
students an opportunity to find new uses for Watson and deepen
the systems’ cognitive capabilities. The firsthand experience
of working on the system will also better position Rensselaer
students as future leaders in the areas of Big Data, analytics,
and cognitive computing.
Known to many as the IBM innovation that beat Jeopardy!’s
all-time champions, Watson has a unique ability to understand
the subtle nuances of human language, sift through vast amounts
of data, and provide evidence-based answers to its human users’
questions. Currently, Watson’s fact-finding prowess is being
applied to crucial fields, such as healthcare, where IBM is
collaborating with medical providers, hospitals and physicians
to help doctors analyze a patient’s history, symptoms and the
latest news and medical literature to help physicians make
faster, more accurate diagnoses. IBM
is also working with financial institutions to help improve and
simplify the banking experience.
Flanked by the avatar of IBM's Watson
computer, IBM Research Scientist Dr. Chris Welty (left)
and Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute student Naveen
Sundar discuss potential new ways the famous computer
could be used. IBM donated a version of its Watson system
to Rensselaer, making it the first university in the
world to receive such a system. Rensselaer students and
faculty will explore new uses for Watson and ways to
deepen its cognitive computing capabilities.
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The leadership of Rensselaer faculty in Web science, Big
Data, artificial intelligence, and other research areas
uniquely situates the university to help expand Watson’s
abilities. Rensselaer faculty and students will seek to further
sharpen Watson’s reasoning and cognitive abilities, while
broadening the volume, types, and sources of data Watson can
draw upon to answer questions. Additionally, Rensselaer
researchers will look for ways to harness the power of Watson
for driving new innovations in finance, information technology,
business analytics, and other areas.
With 15 terabytes of hard disk storage, the Watson system at
Rensselaer will store roughly the same amount of information as
its Jeopardy! predecessor and will allow 20 users to
access the system at once — creating an innovation hub for the
institutes’ New York campus. Along with faculty researchers and
graduate students, undergraduate students at Rensselaer will
have opportunities to work directly with the Watson system.
This experience will help prepare Rensselaer students for
future high-impact, high-value careers in analytics, cognitive
computing, and related fields.
Underscoring the value of the partnership between IBM and
Rensselaer, Gartner, Inc. estimates that 1.9 million Big Data
jobs will be created in the U.S. by 2015. This workforce —
which is in high demand today — will require professionals who
understand how to develop and harness data-crunching
technologies such as Watson, and put them to use for solving
the most pressing of business and societal needs.
“The entire Rensselaer community joins me in thanking IBM
for enabling us to receive and welcome Watson technology to
Rensselaer. The system will be an unprecedented platform to
help students and faculty meet the challenge of our
university’s motto, ‘Why Not Change the World?’” said
Rensselaer President Shirley Ann
Jackson. “Access to the Watson system will enable new
research in cognitive computing as it relates to a diverse
range of scientific and engineering fields, and the experience
of working on Watson will give our students an advantage as
they compete for the best jobs in Big Data, analytics, and
cognitive computing.”
"The award signifies our strong partnership with Rensselaer
and our commitment to ensure New York State has the skills and
capabilities to lead in Big Data applications and the next era
of computing," said Dr. John E. Kelly, Senior Vice President
and Director of IBM Research.
As part of a Shared University Research (SUR) Award granted
by IBM Research, IBM will provide Rensselaer with Watson
hardware, software and training.The ability to use Watson to
answer complex questions posed in natural language with speed,
accuracy and confidence has enormous potential to help improve
decision making across a variety of industries from health
care, to retail, telecommunications and financial services.
IBM and Rensselaer: A History of
Collaboration
Originally developed at the company’s Yorktown Heights, N.Y.
research facility, IBM’s Watson has deep connections to the
Rensselaer community. Several key members of IBM’s Watson
project team are graduates of Rensselaer, the oldest
technological university in the United States. Leading up to
Watson’s victory on Jeopardy!, Rensselaer was one of eight
universities that worked with IBM in 2011 on the development of
open architecture that enabled researchers to collaborate on
the underlying QA capabilities that help to power Watson.
Watson is the latest collaboration between IBM and
Rensselaer, which have worked together for decades to advance
the frontiers of high-performance computing, nanoelectronics,
advanced materials, artificial intelligence, and other areas.
IBM is a key partner of the Rensselaer supercomputing center,
the Computational Center for
Nanotechnology Innovations, where the Watson hardware will
be located.
IBM Shared University Research Awards
Program
IBM’s Shared University Research awards program strives to
connect the research and researchers at universities with IBM
Research, IBM Global Services and IBM’s development and
industries labs. The SUR Awards program is designed to, among
other things, build partnerships and increase access and
successful use of IBM technologies for research and in
curriculum.
About Rensselaer
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, founded in 1824, is
the nation’s oldest technological research university. The
university offers bachelor’s, master’s, and doctoral degrees in
engineering, the sciences, information technology,
architecture, management, and the humanities and social
sciences. Institute programs serve undergraduates, graduate
students, and working professionals around the world.
Rensselaer faculty are known for pre-eminence in research
conducted in a wide range of fields, with particular emphasis
in biotechnology, nanotechnology, computation and information
technology, the media arts and technology, and energy and the
environment. The Institute is well known for its success in the
transfer of technology from the laboratory to the marketplace
so that new discoveries and inventions benefit human life,
protect the environment, and strengthen economic
development.
For more information about Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
go to: http://www.rpi.edu/
About IBM
For more information on IBM Watson, please visit www.ibmwatson.com
To join the social discussion about Watson at Rensselaer
include the hashtag #ibmrpi
Follow Watson on Facebook: www.facebook.com/ibmwatson
Video and B-Roll
Registered journalists and bloggers can download
b-roll and a video about Watson at Rensselaer at
The Newsmarket.
See a video on Watson at Rensselaer on YouTube.
Contacts:
Michael Mullaney
News and Editorial Services
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
518-276-6161
mullam@rpi.edu
Michael Rowinski
IBM Media Relations
720-395-8497
rowinski@us.ibm.com
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Published
January 30,
2013 | |
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