The following blog was written by Computing Community Consortium (CCC) Chair Mark D. Hill from the University of Wisconsin Madison. This week Cerebras announced a bold design to accelerate deep neural networks with silicon that is not cut into chips. AI and Moore’s Law: Artificial Intelligence (AI) is much in the news for what it can do to today and the promise of what it can do tomorrow (CCC/AAAI 20-Year AI Roadmap). Over half a century, AI innovation has been abetted by a million-fold progress in computer system cost-performance and parallelism. For decades, computer benefits came transparently via repeated doubling of processor performance (popularly called “Moore’s Law”). For the last decade, however, AI–especially for the great successes of […]
Computing Community Consortium Blog
The goal of the Computing Community Consortium (CCC) is to catalyze the computing research community to debate longer range, more audacious research challenges; to build consensus around research visions; to evolve the most promising visions toward clearly defined initiatives; and to work with the funding organizations to move challenges and visions toward funding initiatives. The purpose of this blog is to provide a more immediate, online mechanism for dissemination of visioning concepts and community discussion/debate about them.
Deep Neural Network Acceleration Beyond Chips
August 21st, 2019 / in AI, Research News, resources, robotics / by Helen WrightACM SIGARCH BLOG: Increasing Your Research Impact
August 13th, 2019 / in CCC, research horizons, Research News / by Helen WrightThe following blog was originally posted in ACM SIGARCH on August 12, 2019. It is written by Computing Community Consortium (CCC) Chair Mark D. Hill from the University of Wisconsin Madison. Hill is the recipient of the 2019 Eckert-Mauchly award, a lifetime achievement award in computer architecture. Many works present their results; this blog post seeks to aid you in developing your own great results, especially in computer architecture and systems. I learned these lessons over a career leading to an Eckert-Mauchly Award (acceptance speech). I structure this blog post with the scientific method in four steps: Pick a good problem. Develop insights and first hypotheses. Test and refine hypotheses. Repeat steps as needed. Pick A Good Problem The first step to […]
White House Issues Plan for Federal Engagement in AI Technical Standards
August 12th, 2019 / in AI, Announcements, policy, resources / by Helen WrightToday, the White House, through the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), issued a plan for Federal engagement in the development of technical standards for artificial intelligence (AI). The plan was called for as part of the national strategy for U.S. leadership in AI, the American AI Initiative, launched by Executive Order in February 2019. After receiving broad public input, the technical standards plan provides guidance for Federal agencies, the private sector, and the academic community in the development of technical standards and related tools in support of reliable, robust, and trustworthy AI systems, and identifies priorities for Federal government involvement and leadership in AI standards development. “The Trump […]
What else could CCC offer?
August 12th, 2019 / in Announcements, CCC, Research News, resources / by Helen WrightThe Computing Community Consortium (CCC) wants to know what resources you find most valuable and what else we could offer. Please fill out the form below and let us know! Loading…
Sociotechnical Interventions for Health Disparity Reduction Workshop Report Released
August 8th, 2019 / in Announcements, Healthcare, pipeline, research horizons, resources, workshop reports / by Khari DouglasThe Computing Community Consortium (CCC) recently released the Research Opportunities in Sociotechnical Interventions for Health Disparity Reduction workshop report. The CCC’s 1.5 day Sociotechnical Interventions for Health Disparity Reduction workshop took place in April 2018 in New Orleans, co-located with the Society for Behavioral Medicine’s 39th Annual Meeting. This cross-disciplinary workshop, brought together leading researchers in computing, health informatics, and behavioral medicine to develop an integrative research agenda regarding sociotechnical interventions to reduce health disparities and improve the health of socio-economically disadvantaged populations. “Health disparities are differences in disease prevalence, incidence, morbidity and/or mortality in one group as compared to the general population. In Western countries, groups which experience disparities in health outcomes […]
A 20-Year Community Roadmap for AI Research in the US is Released
August 7th, 2019 / in AI, Announcements, NSF, pipeline, policy, Research News, workshop reports / by Helen WrightCCC Chair Mark D. Hill, CCC Vice-Chair Liz Bradley, and CCC Director Ann Schwartz Drobnis provided significant contributions to this post. The Computing Community Consortium (CCC) is pleased to release the completed Artificial Intelligence (AI) Roadmap, titled A 20-Year Community Roadmap for AI Research in the US! An HTML version is available here. This roadmap is the result of a year long effort by the CCC and over 100 members of the research community, led by Yolanda Gil (University of Southern California and President of AAAI) and Bart Selman (Cornell University and President Elect of AAAI). Comments on a draft report of this roadmap were requested in May 2019. Thank you to everyone in the […]







