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  • Hannah wraps up the series by meeting DeepMind co-founder and CEO, Demis Hassabis. In an extended interview, Demis describes why he believes AGI is possible, how we can get there, and the problems he hopes it will solve. Along the way, he highlights the important role of consciousness and why he’s so optimistic that AI can help solve many of the world’s major challenges. As a final note, Demis shares the story of a personal meeting with Stephen Hawking to discuss the future of AI and discloses Hawking’s parting message.

    For questions or feedback on the series, message us on Twitter @DeepMind or email [email protected].

    Interviewee: Deepmind co-founder and CEO, Demis Hassabis

    Credits

    Presenter: Hannah Fry

    Series Producer: Dan Hardoon

    Production support: Jill Achineku

    Sounds design: Emma Barnaby

    Music composition: Eleni Shaw

    Sound Engineer: Nigel Appleton

    Editor: David Prest

    Commissioned by DeepMind

    Thank you to everyone who made this season possible!

    Further reading:

    DeepMind, The Podcast: https://deepmind.com/blog/article/welcome-to-the-deepmind-podcast

    DeepMind’s Demis Hassabis on its breakthrough scientific discoveries, WIRED: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2WRow9FqUbw

    Riemann hypothesis, Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Riemann_hypothesis

    Using AI to accelerate scientific discovery by Demis Hassabis, Kendrew Lecture 2021: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sm-VkgVX-2o

    Protein Folding & the Next Technological Revolution by Demis Hassabis, Bloomberg: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vhd4ENh5ON4

    The Algorithm, MIT Technology Review: https://forms.technologyreview.com/newsletters/ai-the-algorithm/

    Machine learning resources, The Royal Society: https://royalsociety.org/topics-policy/education-skills/teacher-resources-and-opportunities/resources-for-teachers/resources-machine-learning/

    How to get empowered, not overpowered, by AI, TED: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2LRwvU6gEbA

  • AI needs to benefit everyone, not just those who build it. But fulfilling this promise requires careful thought before new technologies are built and released into the world. In this episode, Hannah delves into some of the most pressing and difficult ethical and social questions surrounding AI today. She explores complex issues like racial and gender bias and the misuse of AI technologies, and hears why diversity and representation is vital for building technology that works for all.

    For questions or feedback on the series, message us on Twitter @DeepMind or email [email protected].

    Interviewees: DeepMind’s Sasha Brown, William Isaac, Shakir Mohamed, Kevin Mckee & Obum Ekeke

    Credits

    Presenter: Hannah Fry

    Series Producer: Dan Hardoon

    Production support: Jill Achineku

    Sounds design: Emma Barnaby

    Music composition: Eleni Shaw

    Sound Engineer: Nigel Appleton

    Editor: David Prest

    Commissioned by DeepMind

    Thank you to everyone who made this season possible!

    Further reading:

    What a machine learning tool that turns Obama white can (and can’t) tell us about AI bias, The Verge: https://www.theverge.com/21298762/face-depixelizer-ai-machine-learning-tool-pulse-stylegan-obama-bias

    Tuskegee Syphilis Study, Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tuskegee_Syphilis_Study

    Ethics & Society, DeepMind: https://deepmind.com/about/ethics-and-society

    Row over AI that 'identifies gay faces', BBC: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-41188560

    The Trevor Project: https://www.thetrevorproject.org/

    AI takes root, helping farmers identify diseased plants, Google: https://www.blog.google/technology/ai/ai-takes-root-helping-farmers-identity-diseased-plants/

    How Can You Use Technology to Support a Culture of Inclusion and Diversity?, myHRfuture: https://www.myhrfuture.com/blog/2019/7/16/how-can-you-use-technology-to-support-a-culture-of-inclusion-and-diversity

    Scholarships at DeepMind: https://www.deepmind.com/scholarships

    AI, Ain’t I a Woman? Joy Buolamwini, YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QxuyfWoVV98

    How to be Human in the Age of the Machine, Hannah Fry: https://royalsociety.org/grants-schemes-awards/book-prizes/science-book-prize/2018/hello-world/

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  • AI doesn’t just exist in the lab, it’s already solving a range of problems in the real world. In this episode, Hannah encounters a realistic recreation of her voice by WaveNet, the voice synthesising system that powers the Google Assistant and helps people with speech difficulties and illnesses regain their voices. Hannah also discovers how ‘deepfake’ technology can be used to improve weather forecasting and how DeepMind researchers are collaborating with Liverpool Football Club, aiming to take sports to the next level.

    For questions or feedback on the series, message us on Twitter @DeepMind or email [email protected].

    Interviewees: DeepMind’s Demis Hassabis, Raia Hadsell, Karl Tuyls, Zach Gleicher & Jackson Broshear; Niall Robinson of the UK Met Office

    Credits

    Presenter: Hannah Fry

    Series Producer: Dan Hardoon

    Production support: Jill Achineku

    Sounds design: Emma Barnaby

    Music composition: Eleni Shaw

    Sound Engineer: Nigel Appleton

    Editor: David Prest

    Commissioned by DeepMind

    Thank you to everyone who made this season possible!

    Further reading:

    A generative model for raw audio, DeepMind: https://deepmind.com/blog/article/wavenet-generative-model-raw-audio

    WaveNet case study, DeepMind: https://deepmind.com/research/case-studies/wavenet

    Using WaveNet technology to reunite speech-impaired users with their original voices, DeepMind:| https://deepmind.com/blog/article/Using-WaveNet-technology-to-reunite-speech-impaired-users-with-their-original-voices

    Project Euphonia, Google Research: https://sites.research.google/euphonia/about/

    Nowcasting the next hour of rain, DeepMind: https://deepmind.com/blog/article/nowcasting

    Now DeepMind is using AI to transform football, WIRED: https://www.wired.co.uk/article/deepmind-football-liverpool-ai

    Advancing sports analytics through AI, DeepMind: https://deepmind.com/blog/article/advancing-sports-analytics-through-ai

    MetOffice, BBC: https://www.metoffice.gov.uk/

    The village ‘washed on to the map’, BBC: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-cornwall-28523053

    Michael Fish got the storm of 1987 wrong, Sky News:

    https://news.sky.com/story/michael-fish-got-the-storm-of-1987-wrong-but-modern-supercomputers-may-have-missed-it-too-11076659#:~:text=In%20a%20lunchtime%20broadcast%20on,%2C%22%20he%20confidently%20told%20viewers

    .

  • Step inside DeepMind's laboratories and you'll find researchers studying DNA to understand the mysteries of life, seeking new ways to use nuclear energy, or putting AI to the test in mind-bending areas of maths. In this episode, Hannah meets Pushmeet Kohli, the head of science at DeepMind, to understand how AI is accelerating scientific progress. Listeners also join Hannah on a [virtual] safari in the Serengeti in East Africa to find out how researchers are using AI to conserve wildlife in one of the world’s most spectacular ecosystems.

    For questions or feedback on the series, message us on Twitter @DeepMind or email [email protected].

    Interviewees: DeepMind’s Demis Hassabis, Pushmeet Kohli & Sarah Jane Dunn; Meredith Palmer of the Princeton University

    Credits

    Presenter: Hannah Fry

    Series Producer: Dan Hardoon

    Production support: Jill Achineku

    Sounds design: Emma Barnaby

    Music composition: Eleni Shaw

    Sound Engineer: Nigel Appleton

    Editor: David Prest

    Commissioned by DeepMind

    Thank you to everyone who made this season possible!

    Further reading:

    Using AI for scientific discovery, DeepMind: https://deepmind.com/blog/article/AlphaFold-Using-AI-for-scientific-discovery

    DeepMind’s Demis Hassabis on its breakthrough scientific discoveries, WIRED: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2WRow9FqUbw

    The AI revolution in scientific research, The Royal Society: https://royalsociety.org/-/media/policy/projects/ai-and-society/AI-revolution-in-science.pdf

    DOE Explains...Tokamaks, Office of Science: https://www.energy.gov/science/doe-explainstokamaks

    How AI Accidentally Learned Ecology by Playing StarCraft, Discover: https://www.discovermagazine.com/technology/how-ai-accidentally-learned-ecology-by-playing-starcraft

    Google AI can identify wildlife from trap-camera footage, VentureBeat:
    https://venturebeat.com/2019/12/17/googles-ai-can-identify-wildlife-from-trap-camera-footage-with-up-to-98-6-accuracy/

    Snapshot Serengeti, Zooniverse:
    https://www.zooniverse.org/projects/zooniverse/snapshot-serengeti

    The Human Genome Project, National Human Genome Research Institute: https://www.genome.gov/human-genome-project

    Exploring the beauty of pure mathematics in novel ways, DeepMind: https://deepmind.com/blog/article/exploring-the-beauty-of-pure-mathematics-in-novel-ways

    Predicting gene expression with AI, DeepMind: https://deepmind.com/blog/article/enformer

    Using machine learning to accelerate ecological research, DeepMind: https://deepmind.com/blog/article/using-machine-learning-to-accelerate-ecological-research

    Accelerating fusion science through learned plasma control, DeepMind: https://deepmind.com/blog/article/Accelerating-fusion-science-through-learned-plasma-control

    Simulating matter on the quantum scale with AI, DeepMind: https://deepmind.com/blog/article/Simulating-matter-on-the-quantum-scale-with-AI

    How AI is helping the natural sciences, Nature: https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-021-02762-6

    Inside DeepMind's epic mission to solve science's trickiest problem, WIRED: https://www.wired.co.uk/article/deepmind-protein-folding

    How Artificial Intelligence Is Changing Science, Quanta:

    https://www.quantamagazine.org/how-artificial-intelligence-is-changing-science-20190311/

  • Hannah meets DeepMind co-founder and chief scientist Shane Legg, the man who coined the phrase ‘artificial general intelligence’, and explores how it might be built. Why does Shane think AGI is possible? When will it be realised? And what could it look like? Hannah also explores a simple theory of using trial and error to reach AGI and takes a deep dive into MuZero, an AI system which mastered complex board games from chess to Go, and is now generalising to solve a range of important tasks in the real world.

    For questions or feedback on the series, message us on Twitter @DeepMind or email [email protected].

    Interviewees: DeepMind’s Shane Legg, Doina Precup, Dave Silver & Jackson Broshear

    Credits

    Presenter: Hannah Fry

    Series Producer: Dan Hardoon

    Production support: Jill Achineku

    Sounds design: Emma Barnaby

    Music composition: Eleni Shaw

    Sound Engineer: Nigel Appleton

    Editor: David Prest

    Commissioned by DeepMind

    Thank you to everyone who made this season possible!

    Further reading:

    Real-world challenges for AGI, DeepMind: https://deepmind.com/blog/article/real-world-challenges-for-agi

    An executive primer on artificial general intelligence, McKinsey: https://www.mckinsey.com/business-functions/operations/our-insights/an-executive-primer-on-artificial-general-intelligence

    Mastering Go, chess, shogi and Atari without rules, DeepMind: https://deepmind.com/blog/article/muzero-mastering-go-chess-shogi-and-atari-without-rules

    What is AGI?, Medium: https://medium.com/intuitionmachine/what-is-agi-99cdb671c88e

    A Definition of Machine Intelligence by Shane Legg, arXiv: https://arxiv.org/abs/0712.3329

    Reward is enough by David Silver, ScienceDirect: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0004370221000862

  • Do you need a body to have intelligence? And can one exist without the other? Hannah takes listeners behind the scenes of DeepMind's robotics lab in London where she meets robots that are trying to independently learn new skills, and explores why physical intelligence is a necessary part of intelligence. Along the way, she finds out how researchers trained their robots at home during lockdown, uncovers why so many robotics demonstrations are faking it, and what it takes to train a robotic football team.

    For questions or feedback on the series, message us on Twitter @DeepMind or email [email protected].

    Interviewees: DeepMind’s Raia Hadsell, Viorica Patraucean, Jan Humplik, Akhil Raju & Doina Precup

    Credits

    Presenter: Hannah Fry

    Series Producer: Dan Hardoon

    Production support: Jill Achineku

    Sounds design: Emma Barnaby

    Music composition: Eleni Shaw

    Sound Engineer: Nigel Appleton

    Editor: David Prest

    Commissioned by DeepMind

    Thank you to everyone who made this season possible!

    Further reading:

    Stacking our way to more general robots, DeepMind: https://deepmind.com/blog/article/stacking-our-way-to-more-general-robots

    Researchers Propose Physical AI As Key To Lifelike Robots, Forbes: ​​https://www.forbes.com/sites/simonchandler/2020/11/11/researchers-propose-physical-ai-as-key-to-lifelike-robots/

    The robots going where no human can, BBC: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/av/technology-41584738

    The Robot Assault On Fukushima, WIRED: https://www.wired.com/story/fukushima-robot-cleanup/

    Leaps, Bounds, and Backflips, Boston Dynamics: http://blog.bostondynamics.com/atlas-leaps-bounds-and-backflips

    Now DeepMind is using AI to transform football, WIRED:

    https://www.wired.co.uk/article/deepmind-football-liverpool-ai

  • Cooperation is at the heart of our society. Inventing the railway, giving birth to the Renaissance, and creating the Covid-19 vaccine all required people to combine efforts. But cooperation is so much more. It governs our education systems, healthcare, and food production. In this episode, Hannah meets the researchers working on cooperative AI, and hears about their work and influences from the famous American psychologist - and pigeon trainer - BF Skinner to the strategic board game Diplomacy.

    For questions or feedback on the series, message us on Twitter @DeepMind or email [email protected]

    Interviewees: DeepMind’s Thore Graepel, Kevin Mckee, Doina Precup & Laura Weidinger

    Credits

    Presenter: Hannah Fry

    Series Producer: Dan Hardoon

    Production support: Jill Achineku

    Sounds design: Emma Barnaby

    Music composition: Eleni Shaw

    Sound Engineer: Nigel Appleton

    Editor: David Prest

    Commissioned by DeepMind

    Thank you to everyone who made this season possible!

    Further reading:

    Machines must learn to find common ground, Nature: https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-021-01170-0

    Introduction to Reinforcement Learning, DeepMind: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2pWv7GOvuf0

    B.F. Skinner, Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/B._F._Skinner

    The Tragedy of the Commons, Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tragedy_of_the_commons

    Staving Off The Ultimate Tragedy Of The Commons, Forbes: https://www.forbes.com/sites/georgebradt/2021/11/02/staving-off-the-ultimate-tragedy-of-the-commons-by-making-better-complex-decisions-cooperatively-in-glasgow/

    Understanding Agent Cooperation, DeepMind: https://deepmind.com/blog/article/understanding-agent-cooperation

    The emergence of complex cooperative agents, DeepMind: https://deepmind.com/blog/article/capture-the-flag-science

  • Hannah explores the potential of language models, the questions they raise, and if teaching a computer about language is enough to create artificial general intelligence (AGI). Beyond helping us communicate ideas, language plays a crucial role in memory, cooperation, and thinking – which is why AI researchers have long aimed to communicate with computers using natural language. Recently, there has been extraordinary progress using large-language models (LLM), which learn how to speak by processing huge amounts of data from the internet. The results can be very convincing, but pose significant ethical challenges.

    For questions or feedback on the series, message us on Twitter @DeepMind or email [email protected].

    Interviewees: DeepMind’s Geoffrey Irving, Chris Dyer, Angeliki Lazaridou, Lisa-Anne Hendriks & Laura Weidinger

    Credits

    Presenter: Hannah Fry

    Series Producer: Dan Hardoon

    Production support: Jill Achineku

    Sounds design: Emma Barnaby

    Music composition: Eleni Shaw

    Sound Engineer: Nigel Appleton

    Editor: David Prest

    Commissioned by DeepMind

    Thank you to everyone who made this season possible!

    Further reading:

    GPT-3 Powers the Next Generation of Apps, OpenAI: https://openai.com/blog/gpt-3-apps/

    https://web.stanford.edu/class/linguist238/p36-weizenabaum.pdf

    Never Mind the Computer 1983 about the ELIZA program, BBC: https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p023kpf8

    How Large Language Models Will Transform Science, Society, and AI, Stanford University: https://hai.stanford.edu/news/how-large-language-models-will-transform-science-society-and-ai

    Challenges in Detoxifying Language Models, DeepMind: https://deepmind.com/research/publications/2021/Challenges-in-Detoxifying-Language-Models

    Extending Machine Language Models toward Human-Level Language Understanding, DeepMind: https://deepmind.com/research/publications/2020/Extending-Machine-Language-Models-toward-Human-Level-Language-Understanding

    Language modelling at scale, DeepMind: https://deepmind.com/blog/article/language-modelling-at-scale

    Artificial general intelligence, Technology Review: https://www.technologyreview.com/2020/10/15/1010461/artificial-general-intelligence-robots-ai-agi-deepmind-google-openai/

    A Definition of Machine Intelligence by Shane Legg, arXiv: https://arxiv.org/abs/0712.3329

    Stuart Russell - Living With Artificial Intelligence, BBC: https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m001216k/episodes/player

  • In December 2019, DeepMind’s AI system, AlphaFold, solved a 50-year-old grand challenge in biology, known as the protein-folding problem. A headline in the journal Nature read, “It will change everything” and the President of the UK's Royal Society called it a “stunning advance [that arrived] decades before many in the field would have predicted”. In this episode, Hannah uncovers the inside story of AlphaFold from the people who made it happen and finds out how it could help transform the future of healthcare and medicine.

    For questions or feedback on the series, message us on Twitter @DeepMind or email [email protected].

    Interviewees: DeepMind’s Demis Hassabis, John Jumper, Kathryn Tunyasunakool and Sasha Brown; Charles Mowbray and Monique Wasuna of the Drugs for Neglected Diseases initiative (DNDi]) & John McGeehan of the Centre for Enzyme Innovation at the University of Portsmouth

    Credits

    Presenter: Hannah Fry

    Series Producer: Dan Hardoon

    Production support: Jill Achineku

    Sounds design: Emma Barnaby

    Music composition: Eleni Shaw

    Sound Engineer: Nigel Appleton

    Editor: David Prest

    Commissioned by DeepMind

    Thank you to everyone who made this season possible!

    Further reading:

    AlphaFold blog, DeepMind: https://deepmind.com/blog/article/alphafold-a-solution-to-a-50-year-old-grand-challenge-in-biology

    AlphaFold case study, DeepMind: https://deepmind.com/research/case-studies/alphafold

    It will change everything, Nature: https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-020-03348-4

    AlphaFold Is The Most Important Achievement In AI—Ever, Forbes: https://www.forbes.com/sites/robtoews/2021/10/03/alphafold-is-the-most-important-achievement-in-ai-ever/?sh=359278426e0a

    Bacteria found to eat PET plastics, NewScientist: https://www.newscientist.com/article/2080279-bacteria-found-to-eat-pet-plastics-could-help-do-the-recycling/

    Protein Structure Prediction Center: https://predictioncenter.org/

    An interview with Professor John McGeehan, BBSRC: https://bbsrc.ukri.org/news/features/enzyme-science/an-interview-with-professor-john-mcgeehan/

    John McGeehan profile, University of Portsmouth: https://researchportal.port.ac.uk/en/persons/john-mcgeehan

    Drugs for Neglected Diseases initiative (DNDi): https://dndi.org/

    A doctor’s dream, DNDi: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tk31iucWYdE

    The Curious Cases of Rutherford and Fry, BBC: https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b07dx75g/episodes/downloads

    Hannah Fry:

    https://hannahfry.co.uk/

  • The chart-topping podcast which uncovers the extraordinary ways artificial intelligence (AI) is transforming our world is back for a second season. Join mathematician and broadcaster Professor Hannah Fry behind the scenes of world-leading AI research lab DeepMind to get the inside story of how AI is being created – and how it can benefit our lives and the society we live in.

    Recorded over six months and featuring over 30 original interviews, including DeepMind co-founders Demis Hassabis and Shane Legg, the podcast gives listeners exclusive access to the brilliant people building the technology of the future. Throughout nine original episodes, Hannah discovers how DeepMind is using AI to advance science in critical areas, like solving a 50-year-old grand challenge in biology and developing nuclear fusion.

    Listeners hear stories of teaching robots to walk at home during lockdown, as well as using AI to forecast weather, help people regain their voices, and enhance game strategies with Liverpool Football Club. Hannah also takes an in-depth look at the challenges and potential of building artificial general intelligence (AGI) and explores what it takes to ensure AI is built to benefit society.

    “I hope this series gives people a better understanding of AI and a feeling for just how exhilarating an endeavour it is.” – Demis Hassabis, CEO and Co-Founder of DeepMind

    For questions or feedback on the series, message us on Twitter @DeepMind or email [email protected].

    Credits
    Presenter: Hannah Fry
    Series Producer: Dan Hardoon
    Production support: Jill Achineku
    Sounds design: Emma Barnaby
    Music composition: Eleni Shaw
    Sound Engineer: Nigel Appleton
    Editor: David Prest
    Commissioned by DeepMind

  • In this special extended episode, Hannah Fry meets Demis Hassabis, the CEO and co-founder of DeepMind. She digs into his former life as a chess player, games designer and neuroscientist and explores how his love of chess helped him to get start-up funding, what drives him and his vision, and why AI keeps him up at night.

    If you have a question or feedback on the series, message us on Twitter (@DeepMind using the hashtag #DMpodcast) or email us at [email protected].

    Further reading:

    Wired: Inside DeepMind's epic mission to solve science's trickiest problemQuanta magazine: How Artificial Intelligence Is Changing ScienceDemis Hassabis: A systems neuroscience approach to building AGI. Talk at the 2010 Singularity Summit Demis Hassabis: The power of self-learning systems. Talk at MIT 2019Demis Hassabis: Talk on Creativity and AI Financial Times: The mind in the machine: Demis Hassabis on artificial intelligence (2017)The Times: Interview with Demis HassabisThe Economist Babbage podcast: DeepMind GamesInterview with Demis Hassabis from the book Game Changer, which also features an introduction from Demis

    Interviewees: Deepmind CEO and co-founder, Demis Hassabis

    Credits:
    Presenter: Hannah Fry
    Editor: David Prest
    Senior Producer: Louisa Field
    Producers: Amy Racs, Dan Hardoon
    Binaural Sound: Lucinda Mason-Brown
    Music composition: Eleni Shaw (with help from Sander Dieleman and WaveNet)
    Commissioned by DeepMind

  • AI researchers around the world are trying to create a general purpose learning system that can learn to solve a broad range of problems without being taught how. Koray Kavukcuoglu, DeepMind’s Director of Research, describes the journey to get there, and takes Hannah on a whistle-stop tour of DeepMind’s HQ and its research.

    If you have a question or feedback on the series, message us on Twitter (@DeepMind using the hashtag #DMpodcast) or email us at [email protected].

    Further reading:
    OpenAI: An overview of neural networks and the progress that has been made in AI
    Shane Legg, DeepMind co-founder: Measuring machine intelligence at the 2010 Singularity Summit
    Shane Legg and Marcus Hutter: Paper on defining machine intelligence
    Demis Hassabis: Talk on the history, frontiers and capabilities of AI
    Robert Wiblin: Positively shaping the development of artificial intelligence
    Asilomar AI Principles
    Richard S. Sutton and Andrew G. Barto: Reinforcement Learning: An Introduction

    Interviewees: Koray Kavukcuoglu, Director of Research; Trevor Back, Product Manager for DeepMind’s science research; research scientists Raia Hadsell and Murray Shanahan; and DeepMind CEO and co-founder, Demis Hassabis.

    Credits:
    Presenter: Hannah Fry
    Editor: David Prest
    Senior Producer: Louisa Field
    Producers: Amy Racs, Dan Hardoon
    Binaural Sound: Lucinda Mason-Brown
    Music composition: Eleni Shaw (with help from Sander Dieleman and WaveNet)
    Commissioned by DeepMind

  • While there is a lot of excitement about AI research, there are also concerns about the way it might be implemented, used and abused. In this episode Hannah investigates the more human side of the technology, some ethical issues around how it is developed and used, and the efforts to create a future of AI that works for everyone.

    If you have a question or feedback on the series, message us on Twitter (@DeepMind using the hashtag #DMpodcast) or email us at [email protected].

    Further reading:

    The Partnership on AIProPublica: investigation into machine bias in criminal sentencingScience Museum – free exhibition: Driverless: who is in control (until Oct 2020)Survival of the best fit: An interactive game that demonstrates some of the ways in which bias can be introduced into AI systems, in this case for hiringJoy Buolamwini: AI, Ain’t I a Woman: A spoken word piece exploring AI bias, and systems not recognising prominent black womenHannah Fry: Hello World - How to be Human in the Age of the MachineDeepMind: Safety and EthicsFuture of Humanity Institute: AI Governance:A Research Agenda

    Interviewees: Verity Harding, Co-Lead of DeepMind Ethics and Society; DeepMind’s COO Lila Ibrahim, and research scientists William Isaac and Silvia Chiappa.

    Credits:
    Presenter: Hannah Fry
    Editor: David Prest
    Senior Producer: Louisa Field
    Producers: Amy Racs, Dan Hardoon
    Binaural Sound: Lucinda Mason-Brown
    Music composition: Eleni Shaw (with help from Sander Dieleman and WaveNet)
    Commissioned by DeepMind

  • The ambition of much of AI research is to create systems that can help to solve problems in the real world. In this episode, Hannah meets the people building systems that could be used to save the sight of thousands, help us solve one of the most fundamental problems in biology and reduce energy consumption in an effort to combat climate change. But whilst there is great potential, there are also important obstacles that will need to be tackled for AI to be used effectively, safely and fairly.

    If you have a question or feedback on the series, message us on Twitter (@DeepMind using the hashtag #DMpodcast) or email us at [email protected].

    Further reading:

    Wired: Inside DeepMind's epic mission to solve science's trickiest problemDeepMind blogs on the partnership with Moorfields NHS eye hospital and predicting eye disease, and Moorfields’ news announcement on its research with DeepMindDeepMind blog: AlphaFold: Using AI for scientific discoveryDeepMind blogs on reducing Google’s energy bill for datacentre cooling and how this project has progressedResearch paper: Tackling Climate Change with Machine LearningQuanta magazine: How Artificial Intelligence Is Changing ScienceDeepMind blog: How evolutionary selection can train more capable self-driving cars

    Other examples of the application of AI for real-world impact include:

    Francis Crick Institute: machine learning models that can help predict heart diseaseNASA: AUDREY machine learning system to better guide first responders through firesUniversity of Southern California: Protection Assistant for Wildlife Security using AI to help wildlife conservation

    Interviewees: Pearse Keane, consultant ophthalmologist at Moorfields Eye Hospital; Sandy Nelson, Product Manager for DeepMind’s Science Program; and DeepMind Program Manager Sims Witherspoon.

    Credits:
    Presenter: Hannah Fry
    Editor: David Prest
    Senior Producer: Louisa Field
    Producers: Amy Racs, Dan Hardoon
    Binaural Sound: Lucinda Mason-Brown
    Music composition: Eleni Shaw (with help from Sander Dieleman and WaveNet)
    Commissioned by DeepMind

  • Forget what sci-fi has told you about superintelligent robots that are uncannily human-like; the reality is more prosaic. Inside DeepMind’s robotics laboratory, Hannah explores what researchers call ‘embodied AI’: robot arms that are learning tasks like picking up plastic bricks, which humans find comparatively easy. Discover the cutting-edge challenges of bringing AI and robotics together, and learning from scratch how to perform tasks. She also explores some of the key questions about using AI safely in the real world.

    If you have a question or feedback on the series, message us on Twitter (@DeepMind using the hashtag #DMpodcast) or email us at [email protected].

    Further reading:

    Blogs on AI safety and further resources from Victoria KrakovnaThe Future of Life Institute: The risks and benefits of AIThe Wall Street Journal: Protecting Against AI’s Existential ThreatTED Talks: Max Tegmark - How to get empowered, not overpowered, by AIRoyal Society lecture series sponsored by DeepMind: You & AINick Bostrom: Superintelligence: Paths, Dangers and Strategies (book)OpenAI: Learning from Human PreferencesDeepMind blog: Learning from human preferencesDeepMind blog: Learning by playing - how robots can tidy up after themselvesDeepMind blog: AI safety

    Interviewees: Software engineer Jackie Kay and research scientists Murray Shanahan, Victoria Krakovna, Raia Hadsell and Jan Leike.

    Credits:
    Presenter: Hannah Fry
    Editor: David Prest
    Senior Producer: Louisa Field
    Producers: Amy Racs, Dan Hardoon
    Binaural Sound: Lucinda Mason-Brown
    Music composition: Eleni Shaw (with help from Sander Dieleman and WaveNet)
    Commissioned by DeepMind

  • Video games have become a favourite tool for AI researchers to test the abilities of their systems. In this episode, Hannah sits down to play StarCraft II - a challenging video game that requires players to control the onscreen action with as many as 800 clicks a minute. She is guided by Oriol Vinyals, an ex-professional StarCraft player and research scientist at DeepMind, who explains how the program AlphaStar learnt to play the game and beat a top professional player. Elsewhere, she explores systems that are learning to cooperate in a digital version of the playground favourite ‘Capture the Flag’.

    If you have a question or feedback on the series, message us on Twitter (@DeepMind using the hashtag #DMpodcast) or emailing us at [email protected].

    Further reading

    The Economist: Why AI researchers like video gamesDeepMind blogs: Capture the Flag and AlphastarProfessional StarCraft II player MaNa gives his impressions of AlphaStar and DeepMindOpen AI’s work on Dota 2 The New York Times: DeepMind can now beat us at multiplayer games, tooRoyal Society: Machine Learning resourcesDeepMind: The Inside Story of AlphaStar Andrej Karpathy: Deep Reinforcement Learning: Pong from Pixels

    Interviewees: Research scientists Max Jaderberg and Raia Hadsell; Lead researchers David Silver and Oriol Vinyals, and Director of Research Koray Kavukcuoglu.

    Credits:
    Presenter: Hannah Fry
    Editor: David Prest
    Senior Producer: Louisa Field
    Producers: Amy Racs, Dan Hardoon
    Binaural Sound: Lucinda Mason-Brown
    Music composition: Eleni Shaw (with help from Sander Dieleman and WaveNet)
    Commissioned by DeepMind

  • In March 2016, more than 200 million people watched AlphaGo become first computer program to defeat a professional human player at the game of Go, a milestone in AI research that was considered to be a decade ahead of its time. Since then the team has continued to develop the system and recently unveiled AlphaZero: a program that has taught itself how to play chess, Go, and shogi. Hannah explores the inside story of both with Lead Researcher David Silver and finds out why games are a useful proving ground for AI researchers. She also meets Chess Grandmaster Matthew Sadler and women’s international master Natasha Regan, who have written a book on AlphaZero and its unique gameplay.

    If you have a question or feedback on the series, message us on Twitter (@DeepMind using the hashtag #DMpodcast) or email us at [email protected].

    Further reading

    AlphaGo the documentary The Surrounding Game: Documentary about the ancient game of GoDeepMind website: AlphaGoGarry Kasparov: Deep ThinkingAI: More than Human - Exhibition at the Barbican Centre, 2019 and online exhibitDeepMind blog: AlphaZero: Shedding new light on chess, shogi, and GoMatthew Sadler and Natasha Regan: Game Changer - a book about chess and AI WIRED: What the AI behind AlphaGo can teach us about being human

    Interviewees: DeepMind CEO Demis Hassabis, Matthew Sadler, chess Grandmaster; Lead Researcher David Silver, Matt Botvinick, Director of Neuroscience Research; and Natasha Regan, women’s international chess master.

    Credits:
    Presenter: Hannah Fry
    Editor: David Prest
    Senior Producer: Louisa Field
    Producers: Amy Racs, Dan Hardoon
    Binaural Sound: Lucinda Mason-Brown
    Music composition: Eleni Shaw (with help from Sander Dieleman and WaveNet)
    Commissioned by DeepMind

  • What can the human brain teach us about AI? And what can AI teach us about our own intelligence? These questions underpin a lot of AI research. In this first episode, Hannah meets the DeepMind Neuroscience team to explore these connections and discovers how our brains are like birds’ wings, what training a dog and an AI agent have in common, and why the simplest things for people to do are, paradoxically, often the hardest for machines.

    If you have a question or feedback on the series, message us on Twitter (@DeepMind using the hashtag #DMpodcast) or email us at [email protected].

    Further reading

    BBC: An AI playlistWait But Why: The AI RevolutionCoursera: AI for everyoneMedium: Machine Learning for HumansGoogle Arts & Culture: 25 moments that have defined AIRoyal Society: What is Machine Learning?The Algorithm: A weeklyemail newsletter from MIT Tech ReviewDeepMind blog: neuroscience and AI: a virtuous circleNature: Far-sighted birds plan breakfast the evening before

    Interviewees in this episode: Deepmind CEO and co-founder, Demis Hassabis; Matt Botvinick, Director of Neuroscience Research; research scientists Jess Hamrick and Greg Wayne; and Director of Research, Koray Kavukcuoglu.

    Credits:
    Presenter: Hannah Fry
    Editor: David Prest
    Senior Producer: Louisa Field
    Producers: Amy Racs, Dan Hardoon
    Binaural Sound: Lucinda Mason-Brown
    Music composition: Eleni Shaw (with help from Sander Dieleman and WaveNet)
    Commissioned by DeepMind

  • Selected as “New and Noteworthy” by Apple Podcasts, the highly-praised, award-nominated first season of "DeepMind: The Podcast" explores the fascinating world of artificial intelligence (AI). Join mathematician and broadcaster Hannah Fry as she meets world-class scientists and thinkers as they explain the foundations of AI, explore some of the challenges the field is wrestling with, and dives into the research that's led to breakthroughs like AlphaGo and AlphaFold. Whether you’re a beginner or an experienced researcher, join our journey into the past, present, and future of AI.

    “I hope what people are going to get out of this series is a better understanding of artificial intelligence, and I hope they also get a great feeling for how exhilarating an endeavour and a journey we’re on.” - Demis Hassabis, CEO and co-founder of DeepMind

    If you have a question or feedback on the series, message us on Twitter @DeepMind using the hashtag #DMpodcast) or email us at [email protected].