Apple publishes Human-Centered Machine Learning workshop - 9to5Mac

Today, Apple published on its Machine Learning Research blog, select recordings from its 2024 Workshop on Human-Centered Machine Learning (HCML), highlighting its work on responsible AI development.Almost 3 hours of content made available The event, originally held in August 2024, brought together Apple researchers as well as academic experts, and explored everything from model interpretability to accessibility, and strategies to predict and prevent large-scale negative outcomes due to the evolution of AI.Here is the full list of videos made available: “Engineering Better UIs via Collaboration with Screen-Aware Foundation Models,” by Kevin Moran (University of Central Florida) “UI Understanding,” by Jeff Nichols (Apple) “AI-Resilient Interfaces,” by Elena Glassman (Harvard University) “Tiny but Powerful: Human-Centered Research to Support Efficient On-Device ML,” by Mary Beth Kery (Apple) “Speech Technology for People with Speech Disabilities,” by Colin Lea and Dianna Yee (Apple) “AI-Powered AR Accessibility,” by John Froehlich (University of Washington) “Vision-Based Hand Gesture Customization from a Single Demonstration,” by Cori Park (Apple) “Creating Superhearing: Augmenting human auditory perception with AI,” by Shyam Gollakota(University of Washington) Apple is doubling down on responsible AI development Although the event happened almost one year ago, the talks are still very insightful, as they focus mostly on the human and responsible aspects of machine learning development, rather than on the frontier technology itself.

In the blog post, Apple also highlights its focus on responsible AI development, which includes a set of principles that guide the development of its AI tools: Do you work with machine learning development? How often is responsible development the main part of the conversation? Let us know in the comments.External drive deals on Amazon Seagate Portable 2TB HDD, USB 3.0: $79.99 SanDisk 2TB Extreme Portable SSD, USB-C: $129.95 (was $209.99) Samsung T7 1TB Portable SSD, USB 3.2 Gen 2: $89.99 (was $129.99) WD 5TB Elements Portable External HDD, USB 3.2 Gen 1: $117.49 (was $139.99)   You’re reading 9to5Mac — experts who break news about Apple and its surrounding ecosystem, day after day.Be sure to check out our homepage for all the latest news, and follow 9to5Mac on Twitter, Facebook, and LinkedIn to stay in the loop.

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