State of AI Report 2022 - OnLINE
State of AI Report 2022 - OnLINE
State of AI Report 2022 - OnLINE
ai #stateofai
State of AI Report
October 11, 2022
Artificial intelligence (AI) is a multidisciplinary field of science and engineering whose goal is to create intelligent machines.
We believe that AI will be a force multiplier on technological progress in our increasingly digital, data-driven world. This is because
everything around us today, ranging from culture to consumer products, is a product of intelligence.
The State of AI Report is now in its fifth year. Consider this report as a compilation of the most interesting things we’ve seen with a
goal of triggering an informed conversation about the state of AI and its implication for the future.
Produced by Nathan Benaich (@nathanbenaich), Ian Hogarth (@soundboy), Othmane Sebbouh (@osebbouh) and
Nitarshan Rajkumar (@nitarshan).
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Thank you!
Definitions
Artificial intelligence (AI): a broad discipline with the goal of creating intelligent machines, as opposed to the natural intelligence
that is demonstrated by humans and animals.
Artificial general intelligence (AGI): a term used to describe future machines that could match and then exceed the full range of
human cognitive ability across all economically valuable tasks.
AI Safety: a field that studies and attempts to mitigate the catastrophic risks which future AI could pose to humanity.
Machine learning (ML): a subset of AI that often uses statistical techniques to give machines the ability to "learn" from data
without being explicitly given the instructions for how to do so. This process is known as “training” a “model” using a learning
“algorithm” that progressively improves model performance on a specific task.
Reinforcement learning (RL): an area of ML in which software agents learn goal-oriented behavior by trial and error in an
environment that provides rewards or penalties in response to their actions (called a “policy”) towards achieving that goal.
Deep learning (DL): an area of ML that attempts to mimic the activity in layers of neurons in the brain to learn how to recognise
complex patterns in data. The “deep” refers to the large number of layers of neurons in contemporary models that help to learn rich
representations of data to achieve better performance gains.
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Definitions
Model: once a ML algorithm has been trained on data, the output of the process is known as the model. This can then be used to
make predictions.
Self-supervised learning (SSL): a form of unsupervised learning, where manually labeled data is not needed. Raw data is instead
modified in an automated way to create artificial labels to learn from. An example of SSL is learning to complete text by masking
random words in a sentence and trying to predict the missing ones.
(Large) Language model (LM, LLM): a model trained on textual data. The most common use case of a LM is text generation. The
term “LLM” is used to designate multi-billion parameter LMs, but this is a moving definition.
Computer vision (CV): enabling machines to analyse, understand and manipulate images and video.
Transformer: a model architecture at the core of most state of the art (SOTA) ML research. It is composed of multiple “attention”
layers which learn which parts of the input data are the most important for a given task. Transformers started in language modeling,
then expanded into computer vision, audio, and other modalities.
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Executive Summary
Research
- Diffusion models took the computer vision world by storm with impressive text-to-image generation capabilities.
- AI attacks more science problems, ranging from plastic recycling, nuclear fusion reactor control, and natural product discovery.
- Scaling laws refocus on data: perhaps model scale is not all that you need. Progress towards a single model to rule them all.
- Community-driven open sourcing of large models happens at breakneck speed, empowering collectives to compete with large labs.
- Inspired by neuroscience, AI research are starting to look like cognitive science in its approaches.
Industry
- Have upstart AI semiconductor startups made a dent vs. NVIDIA? Usage statistics in AI research shows NVIDIA ahead by 20-100x.
- Big tech companies expand their AI clouds and form large partnerships with A(G)I startups.
- Hiring freezes and the disbanding of AI labs precipitates the formation of many startups from giants including DeepMind and OpenAI.
- Major AI drug discovery companies have 18 clinical assets and the first CE mark is awarded for autonomous medical imaging diagnostics.
- The latest in AI for code research is quickly translated by big tech and startups into commercial developer tools.
Politics
- The chasm between academia and industry in large scale AI work is potentially beyond repair: almost 0% of work is done in academia.
- Academia is passing the baton to decentralized research collectives funded by non-traditional sources.
- The Great Reshoring of American semiconductor capabilities is kicked off in earnest, but geopolitical tensions are sky high.
- AI continues to be infused into a greater number of defense product categories and defense AI startups receive even more funding.
Safety
- AI Safety research is seeing increased awareness, talent, and funding, but is still far behind that of capabilities research.
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Our 2021 Prediction Grad Evidence
e
DeepMind’s Gato model makes progress in this direction in which a transformer
Transformers replace RNNs to learn world models with which RL
Yes predicts the next state and action, but it is not trained with RL. University of Geneva’s
agents surpass human performance in large and rich games.
GPT-like transformer model IRIS solves tasks in Atari environments.
ASML’s market cap reaches $500B. No Current market cap is circa $165B (3 Oct 2022)
DeepMind shows a major breakthrough in the physical sciences. Yes Three (!) DeepMind papers in mathematics and material science.
Access to Taiwanese and South Korean semiconductor companies US CHIPS Act 2022 prevents recipients to expand
2018 Yes
becomes an explicit part of the trade war between US and China. operations in China. TSMC caught in the crosshairs.
The government of an OECD country blocks the acquisition of a The UK, amongst others, blocked the acquisition of Arm
2018 Yes
leading ML company by a US or Chinese HQ'd tech company. by NVIDIA.
2020 NVIDIA does not end up completing its acquisition of Arm. Yes Deal is formally cancelled in 2022.
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Section 1: Research
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Predicting the structure of the entire known proteome: what could this unlock next?
Since its open sourcing, DeepMind’s AlphaFold 2 has been used in hundreds of research papers. The company
has now deployed the system to predict the 3D structure of 200 million known proteins from plants, bacteria,
animals and other organisms. The extent of the downstream breakthroughs enabled by this technology - ranging
from drug discovery to basic science - will need a few years to materialize.
● There are 190k empirically determined 3D structures in the Protein Data
Bank today. These have been derived through X-Ray crystallography and
cryogenic electron microscopy.
● The first release of AlphaFold DB in July 2021 included 1M predicted
protein structures.
● This new release 200x’s the database size. Over 500,000 researchers from
190 countries have made use of the database.
● AlphaFold mentions in AI research literature is growing massively and is
predicted to triple year on year (right chart).
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Language models for proteins: a familiar story of open source and scaled models
Researchers independently applied language models to the problems of protein generation and structure
prediction while scaling model parameter. They both report large benefits from scaling their models.
● Salesforce researchers find that scaling their LMs allows them to better capture the training
distribution of protein sequences (as measured by perplexity).
● Using the 6B param ProGen2, they generated proteins with similar folds to natural proteins,
but with a substantially different sequence identity. But to unlock the full potential of scale,
the authors insist that more emphasis be placed on data distribution.
● Meta et al. introduced the ESM family of protein LMs, whose sizes range from 8M to 15B
(dubbed ESM-2) parameters. Using ESM-2, they build ESMFold to predict protein structure.
They show that ESMFold produces similar predictions to AlphaFold 2 and RoseTTAFold, but
is an order of magnitude faster.
● This is because ESMFold doesn’t rely on the use of multiple
sequence alignments (MSA) and templates like AlphaFold 2 and
RoseTTAFold, and instead only uses protein sequences.
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OpenCell: understanding protein localization with a little help from machine learning
Researchers used CRISPR-based endogenous tagging — modifying genes by illuminating specific aspects of the
proteins’ function — to determine protein localization in cells. They then used clustering algorithms to identify
protein communities and formulate mechanistic hypotheses on uncharacterized proteins.
● An important goal of genomic research is to understand where proteins localize and how
they interact in a cell to enable particular functions. With its dataset of 1,310 tagged
proteins across ~5,900 3D images, the OpenCell initiative enabled researchers to draw
important links between spatial distribution of proteins, their functions, and their
interactions.
● Markov clustering on the graph of protein interactions successfully delineated
functionally related proteins. This will help researchers better understand so-far
uncharacterized proteins.
● We often expect ML to deliver definitive predictions. But here as with math, ML first
gives partial answers (here clusters), humans then interpret, formulate and test
hypotheses, before delivering a definitive answer.
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Five years after the Transformer, there must be some efficient alternative, right… right?
The attention layer at the core of the transformer model famously suffers from a quadratic dependence on its
input. A slew of papers promised to solve this, but no method has been adopted. SOTA LLMs come in different
flavors (autoencoding, autoregressive, encoder-decoders), yet all rely on the same attention mechanism.
● A Googol of transformers have been trained over the past few years,
costing millions (billions?) to labs and companies around the world. But
so-called “Efficient Transformers” are nowhere to be found in large-scale
LM research (where they would make the biggest difference!). GPT-3,
PaLM, LaMDA, Gopher, OPT, BLOOM, GPT-Neo, Megatron-Turing
NLG, GLM-130B, etc. all use the original attention layer in their
transformers.
● Several reasons can explain this lack of adoption: (i) the potential linear
speed-up is only useful for large input sequences, (ii) the new methods
introduce additional constraints that make the architectures less universal,
(iii) the reported efficiency measures don’t translate in actual
computational cost and time savings.
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Fast progress in LLM research renders benchmarks obsolete, but a BIG one comes to
help
Only 66% of machine learning benchmarks have received more than 3 results at different time points, and many
are solved or saturated soon after their release. BIG (Beyond the Imitation Game), a new benchmark designed
by 444 authors across 132 institutions, aims to challenge current and future language models.
● A study from the University of Vienna, Oxford, and FHI
examined 1,688 benchmarks for 406 AI tasks and identified
different submission dynamics (see right).
● They note that language benchmarks in particular tend to
be quickly saturated.
● Rapid LLM progress and emerging capabilities seem to outrun current benchmarks. As a result, much of this progress
is only captured through circumstantial evidence like demos or one-off breakthroughs, and/or evaluated on disparate
dedicated benchmarks, making it difficult to identify actual progress.
● The new BIG benchmark contains 204 tasks, all with strong human expert baselines, which evaluate a large set of
LLM capabilities from memorization to multi-step reasoning. They show that, for now, even the best models perform
poorly on the BIG benchmark.
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● A possible consequence of emergence is that there are a range of tasks that are out of
reach of current LLMs that could soon be successfully tackled.
● Alternatively, deploying LLMs on real-world tasks at larger scales is more uncertain as
unsafe and undesirable abilities can emerge. Alongside the brittle nature of ML models,
this is another feature practitioners will need to account for. Training
FLOPs
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Diffusion models take over text-to-image generation and expand into other modalities
When we covered diffusion models in the 2021 Report (slide 36), they were overtaking GANs in image generation
on a few benchmarks. Today, they are now the undisputable SOTA for text-to-image generation, and are
diffusing (pun intended) into text-to-video, text generation, audio, molecular design and more.
● Diffusion models (DMs) learn to reverse successive noise additions to images by modeling
the inverse distribution (generating denoised images from noisy ones) at each step as a
Gaussian whose mean and covariance are parametrized as a neural network. DMs generate
new images from random noise.
● Sequential denoising makes them slow, but new techniques (like denoising in a lower-
dimensional space) allow them to be faster at inference time and to generate higher-quality
samples (classifier-free guidance – trading off diversity for fidelity).
● SOTA text-to-image models like DALL-E 2, Imagen and Stable Diffusion are based on DMs.
They’re also used in controllable text generation (generating text with a pre-defined structure
or semantic context), model-based reinforcement learning, video generation and even
molecular generation.
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● Instead of using a diffusion model, Parti treats text-to-image generation as a simple sequence-to-sequence task, where
the sequence to be predicted is a representation of the pixels of the image. Notably, as the number of parameters and
training data in Parti are scaled, the model acquires new abilities like spelling.
● Other impressive text-to-image models include GLIDE (OpenAI) and Make-a-Scene (Meta — can use both text and
sketches), which predate DALL-E 2, and CogView2 (Tsinghua, BAAI — both English and Chinese).
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● Meta made the first splash from Big Tech in text-to-video generation by releasing Make-a-Video, a diffusion model
for video generation.
● In an eerily similar fashion to text-to-image generation, Google then published (less than a week later) almost
simultaneously two models: one diffusion-model based, Imagen, and another non diffusion-model based, Phenaki.
The latter can dynamically adapt the video via additional prompts.
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GPT-NeoX (20B)
GPT-j (6B) Megatron
Turing-NLG (137B) BLOOM
Chinchilla
(70B) (176B)
GPT-3 Pan-Gu (200B) FLAN (137B) Gopher (280B) OPT (175B)
(175B)
Jan 2022 Aug 2022
June 2020 May 2021 Aug 2021 Sep 2021 May 2022
PaLM (540B)
Jurassic-1 Jumbo (204B)
Apr 2022
Jan 2021 Mar 2022 May 2022 June 2022 July 2022 Aug 2022
DALL-E mini
CogView2
Aug 2022
ESM 2
2021 Prediction: in vision, convolutional networks want a fair fight with transformers…
The introduction of Vision Transformers (ViT) and other image transformers last year as SOTA models on
imaging benchmarks announced the dawn of ConvNets. Not so fast: work from Meta and UC Berkeley argues
that modernizing ConvNets gives them an edge over ViTs.
● The researchers introduce ConvNeXt, a ResNet which is augmented with
the recent design choices introduced in hierarchical vision Transformers
like Swin, but doesn’t use attention layers.
● ConvNeXt is both competitive with Swin Transformer and ViT on
ImageNet-1K and ImageNet-22K and benefits from scale like them.
● Transformers quickly replaced recurrent neural networks in language
modeling, but we don’t expect a similar abrupt drop-off in ConvNets
usage, especially in smaller scale ML use-cases.
● Meanwhile, our 2021 prediction of small transformers + CNN hybrid
models manifested in MaxViT from Google with 475M parameters almost
matching (89.53%) CoAtNet-7’s performance (90.88%) on ImageNet top-
1 accuracy.
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41%
81%
22%
16%
2%
9%
7%
5%
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Drug discovery, the flagship “AI for good” application, is not immune to misuse
Researchers from Collaborations Pharmaceuticals and King’s College London showed that machine learning
models designed for therapeutic use can be easily repurposed to generate biochemical weapons.
● The researchers had trained their “MegaSyn” model to maximize bioactivity and
minimize toxicity. To design toxic molecules, they kept the same model, but now
simply training it to maximize both bioactivity and toxicity. They used a public
database of drug-like molecules.
● They directed the model towards generation of the nerve agent VX, known to be
one of the most toxic chemical warfare agents.
● However, as is the case with regular drug discovery, finding molecules with a high
predicted toxicity doesn’t mean it is easy to make them. But as drug discovery
with AI in the loop is being dramatically improved, we can imagine best practices
in drug discovery diffusing into building cheap biochemical weapons.
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While US-based authors published more AI papers than Chinese peers in 2022, China and
Chinese institutions are growing their output at a faster rate
# papers published in 2022 and change vs. 2021 # papers published in 2022 and change vs. 2021
+11% +27%
+24% +13%
-2% +13%
+3% +11%
+10% +1%
+4%
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Section 2: Industry
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$5.1 billion
$2.8 billion
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NVIDIA’s chips are the most popular in AI research papers…and by a massive margin
GPUs are 131x more commonly used than ASICs, 90x more than chips from Graphcore, Habana, Cerebras,
SambaNova and Cambricon combined, 78x more than Google’s TPU, and 23x more than FPGAs.
log scale
23x
78-131x
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For NVIDIA, the V100 is most popular, and Graphcore is most used amongst challengers
The V100, released in 2017, is NVIDIA’s workhorse chip, followed by the A100 that was released in 2020. The
H100 is hotly awaited in 2022. Of the major AI chip challengers, Graphcore is cited most often.
Number of AI papers citing use of specific NVIDIA cards Number of AI papers citing use of specific AI chip startups
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NVIDIA fails to acquire Arm and grows its revenue 2.5x and valuation 2x during the deal
Announced at $40B, NVIDIA’s attempted acquisition of Arm fell through due to significant geopolitical and
anti competition pushback. Nonetheless, NVIDIA’s enterprise value grew by $295B during the period (!!)
Deal announced Deal cancelled
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NVIDIA reaps rewards from investing in AI research tying up hardware and software
NVIDIA has been investing heavily in AI research and producing some of the best works in imaging over the
years. For instance, their latest work on view synthesis just won the best paper award at SIGGRAPH, one of the
most prestigious computer graphics conferences. But NVIDIA has now gone a step further and applied their
reinforcement learning work to design their next-generation AI chip, the H100 GPU.
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David teaming up with Goliath: training large models requires compute partnerships
The hyperscalers and challenger AI compute providers are tallying up major AI compute partnerships,
notably Microsoft’s $1B investment into OpenAI. We expect more to come.
None yet?
None yet?
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In a gold rush for compute, companies build bigger than national supercomputers
“We think the most benefits will go to whoever has the biggest computer” – Greg Brockman, OpenAI CTO
d e
at
m
sti
*e
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How should big tech deal with their language model consumer products?
Meta’s release of the BlenderBot3 chatbot for free public use in August 2022 was faced with catastrophic press
because the chatbot was spitting misinformation. Meanwhile, Google, which published a paper on their chatbot
LaMDA in May 2021, had decided to keep the system in-house. But a few weeks after BlenderBot’s release,
Google announced a larger initiative called “AI test kitchen”, where regular users will be able to interact with
Google’s latest AI agents, including LaMDA.
● Large-scale release of AI systems to the 1B+ users of Google and Facebook
all but ensures that every ethics or safety issue with these systems will be
surfaced, either by coincidence or by adversarially querying them. But only
by making these systems widely available can these companies fix those
issues, understand user behaviour and create useful and profitable systems.
● Running away from this dilemma, 4 of the authors of the paper introducing
LaMDA went on to found/join Character.AI, which describes itself as “an AI
company creating revolutionary open-ended conversational applications”.
Watch this space…
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DeepMind and OpenAI alums form new startups and Meta disbands its core AI group
Once considered untouchable, talent from Tier 1 AI labs is breaking loose and becoming entrepreneurial.
Alums are working on AGI, AI safety, biotech, fintech, energy, dev tools and robotics. Others, such as Meta,
are folding their centralised AI research group after letting it run free from product roadmap pressure for
almost 10 years. Meta concluded that “while the centralized nature of the [AI] organization gave us leverage
in some areas it also made it a challenge to integrate as deeply as we would hope.”
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$580M
$225M
$125M
$65M
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AI coding assistants are deployed fast, with early signs of developer productivity gains
OpenAI’s Codex quickly evolved from research (July 2021) to open commercialization (June 2022) with
(Microsoft’s) GitHub Copilot now publicly available for $10/month or $100/year. Amazon followed suit by
announcing CodeWhisperer in preview in June 2022. Google revealed that it was using an internal ML-
powered code completion tool (so maybe in a few years in a browser IDE?). Meanwhile, with its 1M+ users,
tabnine raised $15M, promising accurate multiline code completions.
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AI-first drug discovery companies have 18 assets in clinical trials, up from 0 in 2020
And many more assets in early discovery stages. We expect early clinical trial readouts from 2023 onwards.
# of assets per pipeline stage per company % of assets per pipeline stage overall
Can AI and compute bend the physical reality of clinical trial chokepoints?
A study of 6,151 successful phase transitions between 2011–2020 found that it takes 10.5 years on average for a
drug to achieve regulatory approval. This includes 2.3 years at Phase I, 3.6 years at Phase II, 3.3 years at
Phase III, and 1.3 years at the regulatory stage. What’s more, it costs $6.5k on average to recruit one patient
into a clinical trial. With 30% of patients eventually dropping out due to non-compliance, the fully-loaded
recruitment cost is closer to $19.5k/patient. While AI promises better drugs faster, we need to solve for the
physical bottlenecks of clinical trials today.
# of registered studies (ClinicalTrials.gov EOY) Stepwise probability of drug success
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The first regulatory approval for an autonomous AI-first medical imaging diagnostic
Lithuanian startup Oxipit received the industry’s first autonomous certification for their computer vision-
based diagnostic. The system autonomously reports on chest X-rays that feature no abnormalities, removing
the need for radiologists to look at them.
● Due to a shortage of radiologists and an increasing volume of
imaging, the diagnostic task of assessing which X-rays contain
disease and which don’t is challenging.
● Oxipit’s ChestLink is a computer vision system that is tasked with
identifying scans that are normal.
● The system is trained on over a million diverse images. In a
retrospective study of 10,000 chest X-rays of Finnish primary
health care patients, the AI achieved a sensitivity of 99.8% and specificity of 36.4 % for recognising clinically
significant pathology on a chest X-ray.
● As such, the AI could reliably remove 36.4% of normal chest X-rays from a primary health care population data set
with a minimal number of false negatives, leading to effectively no compromise on patient safety and a potential
significant reduction of workload.
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Spinout.fyi: an open database to help founders and policymakers fix the spinout problem
Spinout.fyi crowdsourced a database of spinout deal terms from founders representing >70 universities all over
the world. The database spans AI and non-AI companies across different product categories (software,
hardware, medical, materials, etc.), and shows that the UK situation, while particularly discouraging for
founders, isn’t isolated. Only a few regions stand out as being founder-friendly, like the Nordics and Switzerland
(ETH Zürich in particular). A major reason for the current situation is the information asymmetry between
founders and TTOs, and the spinout.fyi database aims to give founders a leg up in the process.
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As 5-year programmes in Berkeley and Stanford wrap up, what comes next?
In 2011, UC Berkeley launched the “Algorithms, Machines, and People” (AMPLab) as a 5-year collaborative
research agenda amongst professors and students, supported by research agencies and companies. The program
famously developed the critical Big Data technology Spark (spun out as Databricks), as well as Mesos (spun out
as Mesosphere). This hugely successful program was followed in 2017 by the “Real-time intelligence secure
explainable systems” (RISELab) at Berkeley and “Data Analytics for What’s Next” (DAWN) at Stanford, which
focused on AI technologies. RISELab created the Ray ML workload manager (spun out as Anyscale), and DAWN
created and spun out the Snorkel active labelling platform. Will other universities and countries learn from the
successes of the 5-year model to fund ambitious open-source research with high spinout potential?
$1B val
2017-22
$1B val
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In 2022, investment in startups using AI has slowed down along with the broader market
Private companies using AI are expected to raise 36% less money in 2022* vs. last year, but are still on track to
exceed the 2020 level. This is comparable with the investment in all startups & scaleups worldwide.
Worldwide investment in startups & scaleups Worldwide investment in all startups & scaleups
using AI by round size » view online by round size » view online
▊ $250M+ ▊ $100-250M ▊ $40-100M (Series C) ▊ $15-40M (Series B) ▊ $250M+ ▊ $100-250M ▊ $40-100M (Series C) ▊ $15-40M (Series B)
▊ $4-15M (Series A) ▊ $1-4M (Seed) ▊ $0-1M (Pre-Seed) ▊ $4-15M (Series A) ▊ $1-4M (Seed) ▊ $0-1M (Pre-Seed)
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In this slide, startups & scaleups using AI include both startups & scaleups with AI-first and AI-enabled products and solutions.
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Worldwide investment in startups & scaleups Worldwide investment in startups & scaleups using
using AI by round size » view online AI by round size » view online
▊ $250M+ ▊ $100-250M ▊ $40-100M (Series C) ▊ $15-40M (Series B) ▊ $4-15M (Series A)
▊ $1-4M (Seed) ▊ $0-1M (Pre-Seed)
$25.2B
$20B $10B
0 0
12
15
16
17
19
20
10
11
13
14
15
17
18
19
21
10
11
13
14
18
21
12
16
20
YT 22
YT 22
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
D
D
In this slide, startups & scaleups using AI include both startups & scaleups with AI-first and AI-enabled products and solutions.
(*) estimated amount to be raised by the end of 2022 stateof.ai 2022
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Combined EV of public startups & scaleups using Combined EV of privately owned startups & scaleups
AI by launch year; worldwide » view online using AI by launch year; worldwide » view online
▊ 2015-2022 YTD ▊ 2010-2014 ▊ 2005-2009 ▊ 2000-2004 ▊ 2015-2022 YTD ▊ 2010-2014 ▊ 2005-2009 ▊ 2000-2004
▊ 1995-1999 ▊ 1990-1994 ▊ 1995-1999 ▊ 1990-1994
$9.6T
$10.0T $2.5T +16% $2.2T
-29% $1.9T
$8.0T $2.0T
$6.8T $6.8T
$4.0T $1.0T
$2.0T $500B
0 0
10
12
13
16
17
18
20
21
10
11
14
15
16
18
19
21
11
14
15
19
12
13
17
20
YT 22
YT 22
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
D
D
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China 69 $1.4T
Israel 14 $53B
Germany 10 $56B
Canada 7 $12B
Singapore 6 $39B
Switzerland 6 $14B
In this slide, startups & scaleups using AI include both startups & scaleups with AI-first and AI-enabled products and solutions.
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Investment in the USA accounts for more than half of the worldwide VC
Despite significant drop in investment in US-based startups & scaleups using AI, they still account for more than
half of the AI investment worldwide.
$120B
▊ Rest of the world
$100B
$13.1B
$80B ▊ China
$7.5B
$8.9B
$60B ▊ United Kingdom
$40B $4.3B
$63.6B $3.8B ▊ EU-27, Switzerland & Norway
$7.5B
$20B $25.1B 53% in 2022
▊ USA
YTD vs. 57% in
0
2022 2021
2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021
YTD
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Enterprise software is the most invested category globally, while robotics captures the largest
share of VC investment into AI
Amount invested in Amount invested in Investment in startups & scaleups Amount invested in startups
Industries startups & scaleups startups & scaleups using AI, 2021-2022 YTD; % of AI startups & scaleups using AI as %
using AI, 2010-2022 YTD using AI, 2021-2022 YTD number of rounds of all VC, 2021-2022 YTD
Enterprise software $133.7B $44.7B 1288 8% 30%
Transportation $109.5B $22.8B 332 2% 21%
Fintech $87.8B $25.1B 660 3% 13%
Health $61.7B $21.9B 689 3% 14%
Robotics $48.9B $18.4B 367 8% 71%
Food $44.1B $6.0B 220 1% 10%
Marketing $43.0B $13.5B 406 4% 24%
Security $37.9B $12.2B 306 5% 25%
Media $27.4B $4.0B 182 2% 13%
Telecom $17.9B $2.7B 44 2% 13%
Semiconductors $17.8B $6.8B 73 2% 41%
Education $14.7B $2.5B 143 3% 9%
Energy $13.1B $3.6B 231 2% 6%
Travel $10.6B $3.4B 27 1% 24%
Real estate $7.7B $617M 148 1% 2%
Gaming $6.5B $629M 55 1% 3%
Home living $6.0B $1.5B 31 1% 8%
Jobs recruitment $5.2B $2.4B 103 3% 14%
Legal $4.9B $568M 88 2% 7%
Sports $3.4B $421M 56 1% 4%
Music $2.5B $28M 22 1% 1%
Fashion $2.4B $349M 48 1% 2%
Hosting $2.2B $408M 16 <1% 9%
Wellness beauty $2.1B $348M 56 1% 3%
Event tech $927M $33M 14 1% 1%
Kids $292M $69M 13 <1% 2%
Dating $85M $5M 4 <1% 4%
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285
300 253
Tax compliance Consumer robotics Autonomous, continuous
software company workload optimization
200 $8.4B Buyout $1.7B Acquisition $650M Acquisition
332 Aug 2022 Aug 2022 Mar 2022
259
211
100
The number of exits in EU-27, Switzerland & Norway has already exceeded 2021 levels
With 108 exits to date, the US hasn’t yet reached half of the 2021 level, while the EU, Switzerland & Norway
combined have already exceeded the 2021 number.
Number of exits among the companies using AI
500
450
▊ Rest of the world
400
350 9
33 ▊ China
300
94
250 1 ▊ United Kingdom
25
200
97
150 ▊ EU-27, Switzerland & Norway
222
100
108 ▊ USA
50
0
2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022
YTD
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Investment in SaaS startups & scaleups using AI is expected to reach $41.5B by the end of
the year, down 33% from last year, but higher than in 2020
VC investment in AI SaaS startups & scaleups » view online
$80.0B
$61.8B
-33%
$60.0B
▊ $250M+
$41.5B
$37.7B ▊ $100-250M
*
$40.0B
$31.1B ▊ $40-100M (Series C)
▊ $15-40M (Series B)
$20.0B 222
▊ $4-15M (Series A)
108
▊ $1-4M (Seed)
0 ▊ $0-1M (Pre-Seed)
2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022
YTD
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The combined EV of public and private SaaS startups & scaleups using AI now amounts
to $2.3T, down 26% from last year, but still higher than in 2020
Combined EV of AI SaaS startups & scaleups by launch year
globally » view online
$4.0T
$3.1T -26%
$3.0T
▊ 2015-2022 YTD
$2.3T
$2.1T ▊ 2010-2014
$2.0T
▊ 2005-2009
▊ 2000-2004
$1.0T ▊ 1995-1999
▊ 1990-1994
0
2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 YTD
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The combined EV of private SaaS startups & scaleups using AI keeps growing and has
already reached $1.1T, up 12% from last year
Combined EV of privately owned AI SaaS startups & scaleups Top valued privately owned startups & scaleups
by launch year; worldwide » view online using AI » view online
+12%
$1.0T
$1.0T $895B
Autonomous driving Online education Fintech-as-a-service
technology platform platform
USA China United Kingdom
$489B Valuation: $30B Valuation: $15.5B Valuation: $15B
$500B
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Section 3: Politics
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Slow progress in providing academics with more compute leaves others to act faster
There is a growing appreciation that AI is an engineering science in which the objects of study need to first be
built. Western academics and governments are starting to wake up to this reality, most notably through the
National AI Research Resource process in the US. While spending years on consultations and marketing
however, others in China and outside academia are finding creative ways to do large-scale AI projects.
Governments / Academia
National AI
Research Resource Stanford opens Center for Research
National AI GLM-130B
Task Force on Foundation Models NAIRRTF Final
Initiative Act (Tsinghua)
Created Report
enacted
NAIRRTF NAIRRTF NAIRRTF NAIRRTF NAIRRTF NAIRRTF NAIRRTF NAIRRTF NAIRRTF NAIRRTF
Meeting 1 Meeting 2 Meeting 3 Meeting 4 Meeting 5 Meeting 6 Meeting 7 Meeting 8 Meeting 9 Meeting 10
Mar Aug
Jan 2021 Ju July Aug Oct Dec Feb 2022 Apr May Jul Sep Oct Dec 2022
n
Research Collectives
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Graph data source: Sevilla et al. Parameter, Compute and Data Trends in Machine Learning stateof.ai 2022
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Ukraine’s homegrown geospatial intelligence GIS Arta software is a sign of things to come
The use of geospatial (GIS) software has reportedly reduced the decision chain around artillery from 20 minutes
to under one minute.
● GIS Arta is a homegrown application developed prior to Russia’s
invasion based on lessons learned from the conflict in the Donbas.
● It’s a guidance command and control system for drone, artillery or
mortar strikes.
● The app ingests various forms of intelligence (from drones, GPS,
forward observers etc) and converts it into dispatch requests for
reconnaissance and artillery.
● GIS Arta was allegedly developed by a volunteer team of software
developers led by Yaroslav Sherstyvk, inspired by the Uber taxi
model.
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The Great Reshoring will be slow: US lags in new fab projects, which take years to build
Between 1990 and 2020, China accelerated its output of greenfield fab projects by almost 7x while the US slowed
down by 2.5x. Moreover, while China and Taiwan fabs take roughly 650 days from construction start to being
production-ready, the US builds fabs 42% slower today than they did 30 years ago.
Total # of greenfield fab projects Avg. # of days from build start to production
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The US CHIPS and Science Act of 2022: $250B for US semiconductor R&D and
production
The bipartisan legislation was signed into law in August 2022. It provides for $53B to boost US-based
semiconductor R&D, workforce and manufacturing, as well as a 25% investment tax credit for semiconductor
manufacturers’ capital expenses. In exchange, recipients must not upgrade or expand their existing operations
in China for 10 years, nor can they use funds for share buybacks or to issue dividends.
● The bill poses a dilemma for Korean (e.g. Samsung), Taiwanese (e.g.
TSMC) and other manufacturers: if they accept US subsidies, then they
must pivot away from China without backlash from Beijing, which is
opposed to this “friendshoring”.
● Since passing the bill, Micron announced a $40B investment in memory
chip manufacturing to increase US market share from 2% to 10%.
Qualcomm will expand its US semiconductor production by 50% by 2027
and in partnership with GlobalFoundries the two will invest $4.2B to
expand the latter’s upstate New York facility.
● CSET estimates the US should focus on its manufacturing capabilities in
leading-edge, legacy logic and DRAM (right chart).
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The US cuts China off from NVIDIA and AMD chips…will this spur Chinese AI R&D?
NVIDIA GPUs are used by all major Chinese technology companies (Baidu, Tencent et al.) and universities
(Tsinghua, Chinese Academy of Sciences et al.). Washington ordered NVIDIA and AMD to stop exporting
their latest AI chips (e.g. NVIDIA A100 and H100, and AMD M100 and M200) to China as a means of curbing
their use in applications that threaten American national security via China. The companies will have to
provide statistics on previous shipments and customer lists. Not having access to state of the art AI chips could
stall a large swath of Chinese industry if domestic suppliers don’t step into the void and fast.
● Earlier this year, CSET analysed 24 public contracts awarded by Chinese PLA units and state-owned defense
enterprises in 2020. They found that nearly all of the 97 AI chips in these purchase orders were designed by
NVIDIA, AMD, Intel and Microsemi. Domestic AI chip companies were not featured. Thus, American chips are
arming Chinese defense capabilities.
● Chinese semiconductor manufacturers have been already cut off from advanced lithography machines made by
ASML and related equipment from Lam Research and Applied Materials.
● It is unlikely that domestic AI chip companies (e.g. Biren) can fill the void: leading-edge node manufacturing is still
only possible by TSMC in Taiwan and because domestic talent, software and technology is still years away from
NVIDIA. China will still accelerate its development. stateof.ai 2022
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Section 4: Safety
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While AI advances rapidly, the safety of highly-capable future systems remains unclear
While many concerns still appear speculative, early AI pioneers considered that highly capable and
economically integrated AI systems of the future could fail catastrophically and pose a risk to humanity,
including through the emergence of behaviours directly opposed to human oversight and control.
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The UK is taking the lead on acknowledging these uncertain but catastrophic risks
The UK’s national strategy for AI, published in late 2021, notably made multiple references to AI safety and
the long-term risks posed by misaligned AGI.
● “While the emergence of Artificial General Intelligence (AGI) may seem like a
science fiction concept, concern about AI safety and non-human-aligned systems
is by no means restricted to the fringes of the field.”
● “We take the firm stance that it is critical to watch the evolution of the technology,
to take seriously the possibility of AGI and ‘more general AI’, and to actively
direct the technology in a peaceful, human-aligned direction.”
● “The government takes the long term risk of non-aligned AGI, and the
unforeseeable changes that it would mean for the UK and the world, seriously.”
● “[We must] establish medium and long term horizon scanning functions to
increase government’s awareness of AI safety.”
● “[We must] work with national security, defence, and leading researchers to
understand how to anticipate and prevent catastrophic risks.”
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● There was a huge increase in interest for education programmes with over 750
people taking part in the online AGI Safety Fundamentals course. New
scholarships were created, including the Vitalik Buterin PhD Fellowship in AI
Existential Safety.
● Notably, Ilya Sutskever, OpenAI’s Chief Scientist, has shifted to spending 50% of
his time on safety research.
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Funding secured, though trailing far behind what goes into capabilities
Increased awareness of AI existential risk has led to rapidly increasing funding for research into the safety of
highly-capable systems, primarily through donations and investments from sympathetic tech billionaires Dustin
Moskovitz (Open Philanthropy) and Sam Bankman-Fried (FTX Foundation). However, total VC and
philanthropic safety funding still trails behind resources for advanced capabilities research, not even matching
DeepMind’s 2018 opex.
Philanthropic AI Safety funding pales in comparison to AI capabilities funding*
*We include fundraises for Adept, Hugging Face, Cohere, AI21, Stability and Inflection under Capabilities VC and fundraises for Anthropic under Safety VC. stateof.ai 2022
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Goal misgeneralization – agents can learn the right skills but the wrong objective
One concern of using RL agents is that they may learn strong skills while having failed to learn the right goals,
and for this failure to only exhibit at test-time under distribution shifts. This issue was empirically demonstrated
for the first time in a paper presented at ICML this year.
● Agents were trained on the CoinRun video
game task, in which a reward is obtained and
the level completes when reaching a coin at the
end of a stage.
● At test-time, the coin is randomly placed
within the stage instead. Agents maintained
their capabilities to navigate and traverse
obstacles, but ignore the coin and instead run
to the end of the level, demonstrating a failure
to learn the correct goal.
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Conjecture is the first well funded startup purely focusing on AGI alignment
Unlike DeepMind, Google Brain, OpenAI and other major research labs, Conjecture is primarily focused on AI
Alignment, with an emphasis on conceptual research and “uncorrelated bets” distinct from other organizations
● Conjecture is a London based start-up, led by Connor Leahy who
previously co-founded Eleuther - the organisation that kicked off
decentralised development of large AI models.
● Conjecture’s operates under the assumption that AGI will be
developed in the next 5 years, and on the current trajectory will be
misaligned with human values and consequently catastrophic for
our species.
● They have raised millions from investors include the founders of Github, Stripe and FTX.
● They are the first AI Alignment group to have published their internal infohazard policy.
● This continues a broader trend of some new AGI focused labs taking alignment research more seriously (see coverage
of Anthropic last year).
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Section 5: Predictions
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3. A SOTA LM is trained on 10x more data points than Chinchilla, proving data-set scaling vs. parameter scaling
4. Generative audio tools emerge that attract over 100,000 developers by September 2023.
5. GAFAM invests >$1B into an AGI or open source AI company (e.g. OpenAI).
6. Reality bites for semiconductor startups in the face of NVIDIA’s dominance and a high profile start-up is shut
down or acquired for <50% of its most recent valuation.
7. A proposal to regulate AGI Labs like Biosafety Labs gets backing from an elected UK, US or EU politician.
8. >$100M is invested in dedicated AI Alignment organisations in the next year as more people become aware of the
risk we are facing by letting AI capabilities run ahead of safety.
9. A major user generated content side (e.g. Reddit) negotiates a commercial settlement with a start-up producing AI
models (e.g. OpenAI) for training on their corpus of user generated content.
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Thanks!
Congratulations on making it to the end of the State of AI Report 2022! Thanks for reading.
In this report, we set out to capture a snapshot of the exponential progress in the field of artificial intelligence, with a
focus on developments since last year’s issue that was published on 12 October 2021. We believe that AI will be a force
multiplier on technological progress in our world, and that wider understanding of the field is critical if we are to navigate
such a huge transition.
We set out to compile a snapshot of all the things that caught our attention in the last year across the range of AI research,
industry, politics and safety.
We would appreciate any and all feedback on how we could improve this report further, as well as contribution
suggestions for next year’s edition.
Nathan Benaich (@nathanbenaich), Ian Hogarth (@soundboy), Othmane Sebbouh (@osebbouh) and
Nitarshan Rajkumar (@nitarshan).
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Reviewers
We’d like to thank the following individuals for providing critical review of this year’s Report:
- Andrej Karpathy
- Moritz Mueller-Freitag
- Shubho Sengupta
- Miles Brundage
- Markus Anderlung
- Elena Samuylova
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Conflicts of interest
The authors declare a number of conflicts of interest as a result of being investors and/or advisors, personally or via
funds, in a number of private and public companies whose work is cited in this report.
Ian is an angel investor in the following companies mentioned in this report: Anthropic and Helsing AI.
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State of AI Report
October 11, 2022