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AI Standards for Global Impact: From Governance to Action AI Part 1: International
Figure 24: Left to right: Leonard Rosenthol, Senior Principal Architect, Adobe and
Vice Chair of AMAS; Touradj Ebrahimi, Professor, Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de
Lausanne, Convenor of JPEG Group, and Vice Chair ofAMAS; Alessandra Sala, Global
President of Women in AI, Chair of AMAS, Sr� Director of Artificial Intelligence and
Data Science, Shutterstock; Cindy Parokkil, AI Policy Lead & Programme Manager,
ISO Central Secretariat and AMAS Vice Chair; Mike Mullane, Deputy Director of
Communications, International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC) and AMAS Vice
Chair, and Vijay Mauree, Programme Coordinator, ITU and AMAS Secretariat
5�6 Humans and AI: The Journey
Manuela Veloso, Head of AI Research at JPMorgan Chase, explored the evolving interaction
between humans and AI from her experience in AI in robotics and AI in finance, highlighted
the following key aspects in her keynote talk:
• Integration of AI capabilities:
o AI integrates three key modules: perception, cognition, and action, aiming to mirror
the way humans operate intelligently.
o Perception involves understanding the environment (e.g. sensors and language
processing). Cognition includes decision-making and reasoning. Action involves
executing decisions, such as moving or communicating.
• Autonomous AI agents:
o Examples like robots playing soccer demonstrate AI systems operating autonomously,
making real-time decisions without human input.
o These agents process sensory data, strategize, and act to achieve goals without pre-
programmed moves.
• AI with limitations:
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