Current:Home > Markets"Godmother of A.I." Fei-Fei Li on technology development: "The power lies within people"-LoTradeCoin
"Godmother of A.I." Fei-Fei Li on technology development: "The power lies within people"
View Date:2025-01-11 15:55:15
Fei-Fei Li, known as the "Godmother of A.I.," has spent more than 20 years in the field of artificial intelligence, developing the groundbreaking technology and advocating for its use in ethical ways.
Now, Li helms Stanford University's artificial intelligence lab, where the professor leads a team of graduate students teaching robots to mimic human behavior. She also leads a campaign that advocates for all A.I. being driven by people, and has taken that message to Congress.
Li, 47, advocates for bringing artificial intelligence to healthcare, and has advised President Joe Biden on the urgent need for more public-sector funding so that the U.S. can become the global leader in the technology.
Despite her achievements in the field, she's uncomfortable with her nickname.
"I would never call myself that," she said. "I don't know how to balance my personal discomfort with the fact that, throughout history, men are always called godfathers of something."
Li made a major breakthrough in the field years ago when she built a system to teach computers to recognize or "see" millions of images and describe the world around us. She called it "ImageNet," and at the time, many doubted it, with one colleague even telling her that it was too big of a leap too far ahead of its time.
In 2012, ImageNet was used to power a deep learning neural network algorithm called AlexNet, developed by researchers at the University of Toronto. That became a model for A.I. models like ChatGPT that are popular today.
"I think that when you see something that's too early, it's often a different way of saying 'We haven't seen this before,'" Li said. "In hindsight, we bet on something we were right about. Our hypothesis of A.I. needs to be data-driven, and data-centric was the right hypothesis."
When she's not working on A.I., Li is trying to bring more people into the world of artificial intelligence and technology. She is the co-founder of AI4ALL, an organization that pushes for more diversity in the field.
"We don't have enough diversity for this technology," Li said. "We're seeing improvements, there's more women, but the number of students from diverse backgrounds, especially people of color, we have a long way to go."
Li is also the author of a memoir "The Worlds I See." Within its pages, she documents her hardscrabble beginnings and immigration to the U.S. from China as a child and her rise to the top of her field. It wasn't a linear path: Her family immigrated to New Jersey in a move that she said turned her world upside down, and at various points in her life, she worked odd jobs, like working at her parents' dry cleaning shop in college and doing shifts at a Chinese restaurant for just $2 an hour.
"I don't know how it happened," she said. "You're uprooted from everything you knew. You don't even know the language, and you see the challenges you're dealing with."
Those experiences helped mold Li into the groundbreaking technology leader she is today, and her hard work resulted in a nearly full ride to Princeton University, where she studied physics before earning a Ph.D. from the California Institute of Technology.
Within the memoir, Li also notes her lingering doubts about her work in artificial intelligence, saying in one passage that she feels a "twinge of culpability" in the development of the technology, which she describes as something a phenomenon and responsibility that's capable of both destruction and inspiration.
"Because we are seeing the consequences, and many of them are unintended, in ushering this technology, I do feel we have more responsibility as scientists and technology leaders and educators than just creating the tech," she said. "I don't want to give agency to A.I. itself. It's going to be used by people, and the power lies within people."
- In:
- Technology
- California
- Artificial Intelligence
Jo Ling Kent is a senior business and technology correspondent for CBS News.
Twitter InstagramveryGood! (12367)
Related
- 25 monkeys caught but more still missing after escape from research facility in SC
- Britney Spears’ Lawyer Previously Detailed Plan for Sam Asghari Prenup to Protect Her “Best Interests”
- Bradley Cooper, 'Maestro' and Hollywood's 'Jewface' problem
- Blaring sirens would have driven locals 'into the fire,' Maui official says
- Kevin Costner Shares His Honest Reaction to John Dutton's Controversial Fate on Yellowstone
- Hillsong Church founder Brian Houston found not guilty of concealing his father’s child sex crimes
- 6th person dies in Pennsylvania house explosion; victims named, blast under investigation
- Foes of Biden’s Climate Plan Sought a ‘New Solyndra,’ but They Have yet to Dig Up Scandal
- Shaboozey to headline halftime show of Lions-Bears game on Thanksgiving
- Connecticut official continues mayoral campaign despite facing charges in Jan. 6 case
Ranking
- Trump pledged to roll back protections for transgender students. They’re flooding crisis hotlines
- Key takeaways from Trump's indictment in Georgia's 2020 election interference case
- South Dakota state senator resigns and agrees to repay $500,000 in pandemic aid
- 3 dead from rare bacterial infection in New York area. What to know about Vibrio vulnificus.
- See Blake Shelton and Gwen Stefani's Winning NFL Outing With Kids Zuma and Apollo
- Adele tears up revealing sex of couple's baby at Vegas concert: That was so lovely
- Our favorite product launches from LG this year—and what's coming soon
- Marcus Jordan Says Larsa Pippen Wedding Is In the Works and Sparks Engagement Speculation
Recommendation
-
Georgia remains part of College Football Playoff bracket projection despite loss
-
More than 1.5 million dehumidifiers recalled after 23 fires, including brands GE and Kenmore
-
23-year-old California TV producer dies falling 30 feet from banned rope swing
-
Girl With No Job’s Claudia Oshry Reveals She’s “Obviously” Using Ozempic
-
2025 NFL mock draft: QBs Shedeur Sanders, Cam Ward crack top five
-
Target sales dip first time in 6 years amid Pride Month backlash, inflation
-
Netflix's Selling the OC Season 2 Premiere Date Revealed
-
UN: North Korea is increasing repression as people are reportedly starving in parts of the country