This information was provided by Jeff Dean, a senior vice president at Google, in a blog post, which says, “I’m happy to make announcements in three transformative areas of AI today: first, using AI to make technology accessible in many more languages. Second, exploring how AI might bolster creativity. And third, in AI for Social Good, including climate adaptation.” According to the dominant search engine, language is essential to how individuals communicate and comprehend the outside world. It comes as no surprise, then, that this is also how people interact with technology most naturally. However, just a small number of the more than 7,000 languages spoken in the globe today are well-represented online. This means that conventional methods for training language models on material from the web fall short of capturing the variety of ways that people communicate around the world. The pursuit of the company’s goal to make knowledge accessible and beneficial to everyone has historically been hampered by this. With the launch of its ambitious 1,000 Languages Initiative, Google hopes to improve inclusion for billions of people living in underserved communities worldwide by developing an AI model that supports the top 1,000 languages. Technology has been evolving quickly, both in terms of how people use it and its capabilities. People are increasingly using new modalities including photos, videos, and speech to find and share information. “And our most advanced language models are multimodal – meaning they’re capable of unlocking information across these many different formats. With these seismic shifts come new opportunities,” Jeff Dean added. The Universal Speech Model (USM), created by Google as part of this programme and with a focus on multimodality, has been trained in over 400 languages, making it the most comprehensive speech model to date in terms of language coverage. The company is collaborating with communities all across the world to source representative voice data as it expands on this effort. By closely collaborating with scholars and organisations in Africa to generate and disseminate data, Google just unveiled voice typing for 9 additional African languages on Gboard. Furthermore, it is actively collaborating with regional governments, non-governmental organisations, and academic institutions in South Asia to eventually gather representative audio samples from all the region’s dialects and languages. For the latest gadget and tech news, and gadget reviews, follow us on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram. For newest tech & gadget videos subscribe to our YouTube Channel. You can also stay up to date using the Gadget Bridge Android App. You can find the latest car and bike news here.