NAAI International Artificial Intelligence Seminar, Second Phase

We sincerely invite you to attend the NAAI International Artificial Intelligence Seminar, Second Phase. This seminar will focus on the latest research progress, technological innovation, and industry applications in the field of artificial intelligence. Five internationally renowned experts will deliver exciting keynote speeches, sharing their cutting-edge achievements and profound insights.

Meeting agenda highlights, guest lineup

Title: NLIP: A Universal Application Level Protocol for Inter Agent Communication

Time: 9:10-9:50

Abstract: The emergence of Large Language Models (LLMs) has made interactive natural language interaction between machines possible, which did not exist before. This means that natural language interfaces can replace many mobile applications used today. Just as the emergence of browsers in the 1990s simplified technology by replacing a large number of client applications with a standard application, a universal natural language interaction protocol may also replace a large number of client applications to provide a universal application layer protocol. The integration of universal application layer protocols will bring significant benefits to all levels of society - consumers can use a single application for various interactions, the IT infrastructure maintenance burden of enterprises will be simpler, and integration between different enterprises can be simplified. Specifically, a set of interactive intelligent AI agents can use a universal protocol for dialogue.

Guest: Professor Dinesh C. Verma, FREng, Fellow of the Royal Academy of Engineering in the United Kingdom.

Title: "Energy and Environmental Problems Facing the 3rd World and Their Problem Solutions for Sustainable Development"

Time: 9:50-10:30

Summary: Energy and environmental issues faced by the Third World and possible solutions for their sustainable development. Guests: Academician of the Indian National Academy of Sciences, Academician of the Indian National Academy of Engineering, Professor D. P. Kothari, IEEE Fellow

Title: The Braided Structure of Time in AI

Time: 10:30-11:10

Abstract: Regarding the evolution of information technology, including the history of cybernetics, machine translation, artificial intelligence, computer networks, etc., we will prove that the innovation of artificial intelligence is surprising because its progress is often unpredictable and therefore appears chaotic, rather than catastrophic in the sense of technological singularity. Its actual development curve can often be traced back to the past, and no one cares about it. The path taken and then abandoned in basic research suddenly reappears and achieves success, which is sometimes the case with neural networks or automatic translation. Some clues of change are segmented and subdivided to such an extent that the clues of time seem forked and distorted, rather than simply linear, as implied by the classical concept of progress, due to its cumulative nature. Therefore, the structure of time is not as orderly as shelf space, but rather somewhat convoluted. In other words, at any given moment, there are several choices, some of the smartest people are working hard while others seem to be retreating and hiding from the public eye. Then, from time to time, what appears hidden will reappear, while what gradually enters the field of view will disappear. So, time is like a tangled strand of hair, a braid that will scatter or even disappear from sight before reappearing in new light and disappearing again. In this sense, we can refer to the information technology era in contemporary modernity as the weaving era.

Guest: Professor Jean Gabriel Ganascia, Professor at Sorbonne University in France, Fellow of the European Society for Artificial Intelligence, and Chair of the Ethics Committee at the French National Centre for Scientific Research

Theme Report 4: "Provisional"

Time: 11:10-12:00

Summary: Provisional

Guest: Professor Gitta Kutyniok, Head of the Department of Artificial Intelligence Mathematics at the University of Munich.

Title: The Rise of Agenetic AI: Trends, Opportunities, and Responsible Development

Time: 12:00-12:40

Abstract: This speech explores the evolution of artificial intelligence from narrow task-based systems to emerging proxy artificial intelligence models capable of autonomous decision-making, planning, and adaptation - moving forward along the path towards general artificial intelligence (AGI). It covers current trends in multimodal models, open-source proxies, and real-world use cases.

Guest: Professor Logesh Rajendran, Global Cloud Infrastructure Architect at Citicorp in India

Participation method

Meeting Time: 9:00 AM Eastern Time, May 31, 2025- Meeting Platform: Zoom - Meeting Number: 818 5382 8322 Password: 854745- Meeting Link: https://us06web.zoom.us/j/81853828322?pwd=D7g1bM2SxPTFbgJxrjihkMm2P8tb18.1

Conference submission

Submission journal: Journal of International Institute of Engineering Psychology Journal website: Journal.iioep.org Submission guidelines: You need to register an account on the official website of Journal of International Institute of Engineering Psychology; The final version of the paper must be submitted in PDF format; Peer review process for journals; After confirming the acceptance, the article will be published online. Journal submission directions: 1. Artificial Intelligence 2. Computer Science 3. Engineering Psychology 4. Human Computer Interaction, etc.

organizer

organizer

National Academy of Artificial Intelligence (NAAI)

co-organizer

International Institute of Engineering Psychology (IIEP)

Academic support units

Sorbonne University in France, University of Munich (LMU)