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Startup Lucidya transforms data analysis and monitoring

KAUST ·

Lucidya, a startup founded by Saudi entrepreneurs including KAUST alumnus Zuhair Khayyat, utilizes AI and Big Data to analyze social media content from platforms like Twitter and Facebook, as well as articles from 200 million websites in over 120 languages. The technology predicts user emotions, detects interests, and provides content analyses to customers for better decision-making. Lucidya commercially transformed the scientific research 'Tagreed' to start their company. Why it matters: This demonstrates the growing potential of Saudi startups in leveraging AI for data analysis and social media monitoring, and it showcases the role of KAUST in fostering technological innovation and entrepreneurship within the Kingdom.

KAUST helps accelerate the electric vehicle sector in Saudi Arabia

KAUST ·

Lucid Motors is partnering with KAUST to recruit talent for its EV manufacturing plant in King Abdullah Economic City (KAEC). KAUST's programs aim to connect talent with job-market demands of EV companies like Lucid, particularly in electrical, automotive engineering, battery tech, and renewable energy. A KAUST alumnus highlighted his role at Lucid as contributing to Saudi Arabia's transformation into a global technology leader, supported by Vision 2030. Why it matters: The partnership accelerates Saudi Arabia's Vision 2030 goals in the EV sector by leveraging local talent and research capabilities.

Latent Space Exploration for Safe and Trustworthy AI Models

MBZUAI ·

Hassan Sajjad from Dalhousie University presented research on exploring the latent space of AI models to assess their safety and trustworthiness. He discussed use cases where analyzing latent space helps understand the robustness-generalization tradeoff in adversarial training and evaluate language comprehension. Sajjad's work aims to build better AI models and increase trust in their capabilities by looking at model internals. Why it matters: Intrinsic evaluation of model internals will become important to improving AI safety and robustness.

Young KAUST scientists attend 65th Lindau Nobel Laureate Meeting

KAUST ·

Three KAUST students, Mohammed Zidan, Joanna Nasser, and Stephanie Saade, were selected to attend the 65th Lindau Nobel Laureate Meeting in Germany. The meeting will host 65 Nobel Laureates and 650 young researchers in physiology, medicine, physics, and chemistry. The students look forward to the transfer of knowledge and networking opportunities with leading scientists. Why it matters: This recognition highlights KAUST's commitment to fostering young scientific talent and providing opportunities for them to engage with the global scientific community.

At the forefront of programming models

KAUST ·

KAUST held its second hackathon and third NVIDIA workshop. Attendees listened to lectures from international experts. Participants worked on porting their scientific applications to a GPU accelerator. Why it matters: Such events help build regional expertise in accelerated computing and attract international collaboration.

Luma AI, an AI startup building multimodal AGI, raises $900 million led by Saudi Arabia-based HUMAIN - Indian Startup News

GCC AI Startup ·

Luma AI, a startup developing multimodal AGI, has raised $900 million in a funding round led by HUMAIN, a Saudi Arabia-based investment firm. The company is focused on building general-purpose AI models that can understand and generate different types of data, including images, video, and 3D scenes. This funding round will allow Luma AI to scale its research and development efforts. Why it matters: This investment signals the growing interest and financial commitment from Saudi Arabian entities in advancing artificial general intelligence capabilities.