Top 10 AI Powered Tech Influencers To Follow

Top 10 AI Powered Tech Influencers To Follow

Top 10 AI Powered Tech Influencers To Follow

 

The world is undergoing rapid change, and AI is positioned as the primary driver of change, disruption, and competitive advantage in today's tough economy.

The field of technology is seeing rapid advancements in artificial intelligence. Finally, it is having an impact on the world economy. Supporters of AI think the world could change as a result of it.

It has expanded past geographical and technological boundaries, resulting in significant global changes.

The CEO of Google, Sundar Pichai, says that AI is "deeper than electricity or fire."

But because AI is still in its infancy, it needs to be cultivated by those who influence it. The key players in AI will be identified in this article, including prominent researchers, industry insiders, and product innovators. These people are constantly updating their followers on the newest developments in AI.

Influencers in AI are currently leading discussions about news and trends in AI on social media and elsewhere, as well as giving business advice. They also inform us of the newest developments in and knowledge about AI.

You can help yourself learn new things and broaden your knowledge by imitating the great minds of AI. It is fascinating to learn from the best scientists. They include leaders in business, academia, and other fields. Their knowledge can unquestionably influence change and improve the world.

So now, let's move on to the top 10 AI-powered tech influencers to follow –

10. Andrej Karpathy

Andrej Karpathy, a computer scientist previously the director of artificial intelligence and Autopilot Vision at Tesla, was born on October 23, 1986, in Slovakia and Canada. He is an authority on computer vision and deep learning.

Andrej Karpathy was raised in Toronto after his family relocated there when he was 15. He was born in Bratislava, Czechoslovakia (currently Slovakia). He got a degree from the University of Toronto with a computer science and physics degree in 2009, and the University of British Columbia awarded him a master's degree in physical simulation in 2011.

Karpathy earned his PhD from Stanford University in 2015 under the direction of Fei-Fei Li, concentrating on the interface between computer vision and natural language processing as well as deep learning models appropriate for this task. Convolutional Neural Networks for Visual Recognition, the first deep learning course offered at Stanford, was created and taught by him. When 750 students were enrolled in the class in 2017, it had grown from 150 students in 2015 to one of Stanford's largest classes.

Karpathy served as a research scientist at the artificial intelligence research organization OpenAI from 2015 to 2017. He is a founding member of the organization. In June 2017, he was appointed director of artificial intelligence at Tesla.

9. Andrew Ng

American computer scientist Andrew Yan-Tak Ng, born in the United Kingdom, is an expert in machine learning and artificial intelligence. Ng co-founded Baidu and served as its first chief scientist, growing the business' Artificial Intelligence Group into a group of several thousand employees.

Ng is an adjunct lecturer at Stanford University (Director of its Stanford AI Lab). Ng co-founded Coursera and deeplearning.ai, two organizations that have significantly contributed to online education. Having instructed more than 2.5 million students through his online courses, he has spearheaded numerous initiatives to "democratize deep learning."

He was named one of Time magazine's 100 Most Influential People in 2012 and one of the Fast Company's Most Creative People in 2014. He is a well-known and significant computer scientist. He founded and now serves as the AI Fund's CEO, established in 2018 as a $175 million investment fund to assist startups using artificial intelligence. He set up Landing AI, a provider of SaaS solutions with AI.

Ng was born in the UK in 1976. Ronald P. Ng and Tisa Ho, his parents, are both immigrants from Hong Kong. He has a sibling or siblings. He was raised in Singapore and Hong Kong and received his education there, graduating from Raffles Institution in 1992.

8. Fei Fei Li

American computer scientist Fei-Fei Li works in the field. She holds the title of Sequoia Capital Professor of Computer Science at Stanford University. Li shares leadership of the Stanford Vision and Learning Lab and the Stanford Institute for Human-Centered Artificial Intelligence. She served as the Stanford Artificial Intelligence Laboratory's director from 2013 to 2018.

In 2017, she co-founded AI4ALL, a nonprofit organization devoted to boosting inclusion and diversity in the artificial intelligence field. Her research interests include AI, machine learning, deep learning, computer vision, and cognitive neuroscience. She served as the principal investigator and chief scientist for ImageNet.

In recognition of his contributions to creating sizable knowledge bases for machine learning and visual comprehension, Li was elected to the National Academy of Engineering (NAE) in 2020.

Li was raised in Chengdu after being born in Beijing, China, in 1976. When she was 12, her father transferred to the country, and when she was 15, she and her mother followed him to Parsippany-Troy Hills, New Jersey. She completed her high school at Parsippany High School in 1995, and in 2017 she was honored by being inducted into the school's Hall of Fame.

7. Vladimir Vapnik

Vladimir Naumovich Vapnik (born December 6, 1936) is a critical proponent of the Vapnik-Chervonenkis theory of statistical learning and a co-inventor of the support-vector machine method and the support-vector clustering algorithm.

Jewish parents gave birth to Vladimir Vapnik in the Soviet Union. He graduated with a master's in mathematics from the Uzbek State University in Samarkand, Uzbek SSR, in 1958 and a doctorate in statistics from the Institute of Control Sciences in Moscow, Russia, in 1964. He oversaw this institution's Computer Science Research Department from 1961 to 1990.

In 2006, Vladimir Vapnik was admitted into the American National Academy of Engineering. 2005 saw him win the Gabor Award; 2008 saw him win the Paris Kanellakis Award; 2010 saw him win the Neural Networks Pioneer Award; 2014 saw him win the Kampé de Fériet Award; and 2017 saw him win the IEEE John von Neumann Medal and much more awards he has received. The 2019 BBVA Foundation Frontiers of Knowledge Award also went to Vladimir Vapnik.

6. Dr Satya Mallick

Dr Satya Mallick was named one of the top 30 AI influencers on Twitter to follow in 2017. He is the founder of Big Vision LLC, a business that offers consulting services and products in computer vision, ML, deep learning, and artificial intelligence. Big Vision LLC is based in San Diego, California. He is also the main contributor to a well-known blog about computer vision.

Dr Mallick is a highly qualified researcher and engineer in computer vision and machine learning. For instance, he has worked on medical image processing, 3D cryo-electron microscopy, computational photography, augmented reality, document analysis, and object recognition using deep learning. He has had numerous research papers accepted by prestigious journals and conferences.

Dr Mallick and his team at Big Vision LLC work with businesses to solve computer vision and machine learning problems that significantly impact algorithm speed and accuracy, reduce manual work, and identify and create intellectual property.

Sight Commerce Inc. is a computer vision company that makes vision and learning solutions for the beauty and fashion industries. Dr Mallick co-founded the company and served as its CTO (R&D) and co-founder. He was responsible for developing, designing, and implementing algorithms and systems for computer vision and machine learning.

Dr Mallick completed doctoral studies at the University of California, San Diego.

5. Yoshua Bengio

Yoshua Bengio, a computer scientist from Canada born on March 5, 1964, is best known for his work on deep learning and artificial neural networks. He holds academic positions at the Department of Computer Science and Operations Research at the University of Montréal and is the institute's scientific leader (MILA).

Bengio shared the 2018 ACM A.M. Turing Award for deep learning with Geoffrey Hinton and Yann LeCun. The "Godfathers of AI" and the "Godfathers of Deep Learning" are Bengio, Hinton, and LeCun.

Jewish immigrants from Morocco to France and later to Canada were the parents of Bengio, a French-born Jew. He received his BSc in electrical engineering, MEng in computer science, and PhD from McGill University (computer science). Bengio is Samy Bengio's brother, a Google scientist.

The Bengio brothers lived in Morocco for a year while their father was stationed there for military duty. His father, Carlo Bengio, was a pharmacist who composed plays and directed a Sephardic theater group in Montreal that performed Judeo-Arabic plays. His mother, Célia Moreno, is also an artist who participated in one of Tayeb Seddiki's major theater productions in Morocco in the 1970s.

4. Allie Miller

Allie Miller is a well-known leader, advisor, and investor in artificial intelligence. Before joining Amazon (AWS), Allie served as the company's global head of machine learning business development for startups and venture capital, guiding leading machine learning researchers and entrepreneurs worldwide.

Before that, Allie led the product development for thousands of companies in computer vision, conversation, data, and regulation as the youngest woman ever to build an artificial intelligence product at IBM. Allie is revolutionizing artificial intelligence outside of work. Allie has presented on artificial intelligence worldwide, spoken before the European Commission, drafted foreign AI strategies, and written eight how-to manuals to assist companies in creating successful AI initiatives.

Allie has been recognised as LinkedIn's Top Voice for Technology and AI in 2019, 2020, and 2021, as well as AIconic's 2019 "AI Innovator of the Year." Top 50 Women in Technology and Top 100 Global Thought Leaders by Award Magazine, Top 100 Women in Technology to Watch in 2022 by Chief in Tech, Top 20 AI Speakers in the World by ReadWrite, Top 25 Data Science Influencers in the World by Data Salon, and Top 20 AI Influencers by Neptune. In addition, Allie co-founded Girls of the Future, is a national ambassador for the American Association for the Advancement of Science, is a 10,000-member organization Advancing Women in Product ambassador, an angel investor in ML startups, and the winner of three national innovation competitions.

Allie is determined, aspirational, and intelligent. Allie graduated from Dartmouth College with a BA in Cognitive Science and a double-major MBA from The Wharton School (coding a three-year ML study and studying Computer Science, Linguistics, and Psychology).

3. Geoffrey Hinton

Geoffrey Everest Hinton is a computer scientist and cognitive psychologist born on December 6, 1947. He is best understood for his research on artificial neural networks. Since 2013, he has been an employee of Google Brain and the University of Toronto. In 2017, he co-founded the Vector Institute in Toronto and was appointed its Chief Scientific Advisor.

Although they were not the first to suggest the strategy, Hinton, David Rumelhart, and Ronald J. Williams were co-authors of a highly cited paper published in 1986 that popularized the backpropagation algorithm for training multi-layer neural networks. Hinton is revered as a leading figure in the deep learning community. For the 2012 ImageNet challenge, Alex Krizhevsky and Ilya Sutskever worked with him to create the AlexNet, which marked a significant advancement in image recognition.

Hinton shared the 2018 Turing Award for deep learning research with Yoshua Bengio and Yann LeCun. They have continued to give public talks and are regarded as the "Godfathers of AI" and the "Godfathers of Deep Learning."

2. Bernard Marr

Bernard Marr is an internationally bestselling author, well-liked keynote speaker, futurist, and strategic business and tech advisor to governments and corporations. He helps companies enhance their operational efficiency, make better use of data, and comprehend the implications of cutting-edge innovations like big data, blockchains, and the Internet of Things.

According to LinkedIn, Bernard is among the top five business influencers in the world. He frequently contributes to the World Economic Forum and has a recurring Forbes column. Every day, Bernard actively interacts with his 1.5 million social media fans and shares articles that are read by millions of people.

Bernard Marr is one of the foremost experts on business performance, digital transformation, and the wise application of data in business. In addition to many others, he has worked with many companies, including Accenture, AstraZeneca, Cisco, CRH, DHL, Fujitsu, Gartner, HSBC, IBM, Jaguar Land Rover, The Home Office, NHS, SAP, Shell, the United Nations, Vodafone, Walgreens Alliance Boots, and many more.

His writings include the international bestsellers "Data Strategy," "Big Data in Practice," "Big Data," "Key Business Analytics," and more. He is the author of 15 books and numerous high-profile reports and articles. He has received multiple No. 1 bestseller rankings on Amazon, the CMI Management Book of the Year award, the Axiom book award, and the WHSmith best business book award. His books have also been translated into more than 20 different languages.

1. Andy Fitze

SwissCognitive - The Global AI Hub was founded in 2016, and Andy Fitze is the company's co-founder and managing partner. Additionally, he leads the Service Management Partners and the Swiss IT Leadership Forum as president. In addition to serving as a director of SwissICT and ICTSwitzerland, Andy is a speaker at the Berne University of Applied Sciences and a member of the Strategic Advisory Board.

Andy previously held the position of Group CIO at RUAG, where he oversaw information technology strategically and operationally. He was even a member of the Group Executive Board. Before joining RUAG, he was in charge of PostFinance's IT governance. He held various management positions in IT and technical process automation while engaging in operational activities for large corporations, where he led many international projects. He has also overseen strategy, architecture, risk, compliance, and process management in addition to IT security in previous positions. He advises senior and board-level managers on digital transformation and gives lectures and speeches worldwide, including in Tel Aviv, Zürich, Davos, Brussels, and Boston. He is passionate about intelligent technologies.

Andy graduated from the University of St. Gallen with a degree in electrical engineering (HTL) and an Executive MBA. He was given the Swiss CIO Award in 2017 for being Switzerland's best IT manager. He is also an ocean skipper, and sailing gives him an excellent mental and emotional balance.

We hope these AI thought leaders would motivate you to create and employ AI systems as skillfully as possible. To receive daily AI news, stay up to date on the latest AI developments, and learn how artificial intelligence can help you optimize your business, follow them.

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