Artificial Intelligence: Comeback Chance for Japanese Manufacturing

Economy Science Technology

Matsuo Yutaka [Profile]

The cutting-edge field of artificial intelligence is attracting great attention and massive funding in Western countries and China. Japan now lags behind these leaders, but it is in a good position to use AI as a tool for revival of the manufacturing sector.

The Japanese Pioneers of Deep Learning

Japan, however, has a well of strength not to be discounted. The original ideas that served as the basis for deep learning came from Japanese researchers. In 1980, Fukushima Kunihiko, a researcher at the NHK Science & Technical Research Laboratories, announced a pattern-recognition system that he dubbed “neocognitron.” Though it was good at recognizing written characters, it did not attract that much attention. It was only with the passage of time and the emergence of today’s computing technology that the true value of Fukushima’s system has become apparent.

Another key figure was Amari Shun’ichi, now a professor emeritus at the University of Tokyo, who did pioneering research on neural networks, providing the base for deep learning technology. Amari, who will turn 80 next year, is still full of vitality, and his name is often mentioned in presentations at academic conferences on deep learning.

Are these just additional examples of the often-observed phenomenon of individual Japanese playing key roles on the global scene? Actually there is more to the story. Consider the following passage:

“We will enhance white-collar productivity. For this purpose, we will make use not just of text but also of images and sounds.”

At a glance, this looks as if it could be the mission statement of a start-up, perhaps one of the current crop of new businesses aiming to make use of deep learning. It might also remind some readers of Google’s mission: “to organize the world‘s information and make it universally accessible and useful.”

Actually the quote is taken from the 1982 document proposing the launch of Japan’s Fifth-Generation Computer Systems project. Undertaken at a time before personal computers, this project received ¥57 billion in funding from the Ministry of International Trade and Industry (now the Ministry of Economy, Trade, and Industry), and it pursued research on AI. Numerous top-flight researchers visited Japan, and both the United States and European countries are said to have had serious discussions about strategies to respond to this Japanese initiative.

It seems that this 1982 enterprise was altogether too advanced for its time. The concept is one that would pass muster even today. Or perhaps it would be better to say that it finally passes muster today. People say that the project failed because it was too advanced and therefore ended up unable to find the right direction for development of technology. In those days there simply was not enough data. There was no Internet, no World Wide Web—and no way of raising white-collar productivity But when we look back at the project, I believe we can say that it was actually aiming in just the right direction.

One can imagine that if the web had emerged 10 years earlier, Japan might have taken the place that Silicon Valley now occupies. The Fifth-Generation Computer Systems project, conducted when Japan was bubbling with rapid growth, may be seen as marking the high point of our country’s approach to “number one” status. After learning about the existence of this project and doing some research on it, I am impressed not so much with its technological content as with the strong ambition and strategic direction underlying it—the quest to be number one.

Japan’s AI Potential

We can expect AI to continue to develop and to have a major impact on a broad range of sectors, such as manufacturing of products like automobiles and industrial machinery, social infrastructure in areas like transportation and logistics, security, including crime prevention, robotics, and medical and nursing care. The added value from this impact is likely to be tremendous.

AI is actually a field to which Japan is well suited. Let me cite a few reasons for this:

1. Strong needs due to population shrinkage and aging

As Japan’s population declines, productivity must be raised, and there are strong social demands for AI and for the development of AI-equipped robots.

2. Ample supply of AI-related human resources

Thanks to the Fifth-Generation Computer Systems project, Japan has ample human resources for AI. People who were university students at the time of the project are now serving as university professors and are educating the next crop of experts. The Japanese Society for Artificial Intelligence has 3,000 members, comparable in scale to the 5,000–6,000 members of the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence, the global AI organization. (By contrast, in most information-technology-related fields, the Japanese society membership figure is smaller by an order of magnitude.) Furthermore, Japan has many people who directly experienced the first and second AI booms, and the level of understanding of the field is high.

3. Traits matching the requirements for AI

In the world of the Internet, value is sought through the linking of information, and the businesses that succeed are those that are quickest to latch on to popular needs. In the case of AI, though, the value system is shared, and what is required is the cleverness to fully understand the mathematical foundations, along with the diligence in fine-tuning the parameters. These are precisely the talents that manufacturing engineers have.

4. No language barrier

In the case of the Internet, the language barrier between Japanese and English was a major impediment for Japan. But in the case of AI, what counts are the algorithms, and language ability is not a major consideration.

5. Strong connection to hardware

With AI, there is a strong chance that Japan can apply its traditional winning pattern of incorporating technology into products and selling them. Deep learning ties in with sensor technology and robotics, and so Japan can probably tap its strengths in these fields.

next: Chance for a Manufacturing Revival

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Matsuo YutakaView article list

Associate Professor, Department of Technology Management for Innovation, Graduate School of Engineering, University of Tokyo. Born in 1975. Received his Ph.D. from the University of Tokyo in 2002. Served as researcher at the National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology, and visiting scholar at Stanford University. Specializes in AI, web mining, and big data analysis. Currently chairs the ethics committee of the Japanese Society for Artificial Intelligence.

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