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iFlytek unveils medical AI, smart classroom tech in Hong Kong amid global push
iFlytek unveils medical AI, smart classroom tech in Hong Kong amid global push

South China Morning Post

time5 days ago

  • Business
  • South China Morning Post

iFlytek unveils medical AI, smart classroom tech in Hong Kong amid global push

Chinese voice recognition giant iFlytek has launched a series of artificial intelligence (AI) products in Hong Kong, where its new international headquarters will support its global expansion, as the firm doubles down on a commitment to home-grown computing infrastructure amid tightened US chip restrictions. iFlytek is making an upgraded international version of its Spark medical large language model (LLM) V2.5 available to organisations in Hong Kong, aiming to assist medical professionals in diagnosis and treatment, with language support for Cantonese and English. It has also launched a Hong Kong version of its healthcare chatbot app Xiaoyi for consumers in the city, the company said on Tuesday. iFlytek also announced the Hong Kong roll-out of products including a smart blackboard for classrooms, and a meeting transcription and translation solution that lets users switch freely among Cantonese, Putonghua and English. Hong Kong would be a launch pad for the company's global expansion in the future, founder and chairman Liu Qingfeng said on Tuesday. 'Hong Kong is not merely a market for iFlytek,' Liu said. 'It is instead our base for innovation and internationalisation.' An aerial photo shows a view of Hong Kong island on May 19, 2025. Photo: AFP The city would play a major role in iFlytek's medical AI efforts, as it offered English-language medical data, and the overseas training of some local doctors could help improve the capabilities of its medical LLM, Tao Xiaodong, president of iFlytek Healthcare, said.

Chinese scientists find first evidence that AI could think like a human
Chinese scientists find first evidence that AI could think like a human

South China Morning Post

time14-06-2025

  • Science
  • South China Morning Post

Chinese scientists find first evidence that AI could think like a human

Chinese researchers have confirmed for the first time that artificial intelligence large language models can spontaneously create a humanlike system to comprehend and sort natural objects, a process considered a pillar of human cognition. It provides new evidence in a debate over the cognitive capacity of AI models, suggesting that artificial systems that reflect key aspects of human thinking may be possible. 'Understanding how humans conceptualise and categorise natural objects offers critical insights into perception and cognition,' the team said in a paper published in the peer-reviewed journal Nature Machine Intelligence on Tuesday. 'With the advent of large language models (LLMs), a key question arises: can these models develop humanlike object representations from linguistic and multimodal data?' 13:28 How a shift toward Trump by tech giants like Meta could reshape Asia's digital future How a shift toward Trump by tech giants like Meta could reshape Asia's digital future LLMs are AI models trained on a vast amount of text data – along with visual and audio data in the case of multimodal large language models (MLLMs) – to process tasks.

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