Europe’s ambition is to be a world-leader in AI: a leading light in technology development, a global hub for talent and AI innovations that benefit society, and a driving force for regulatory frameworks that foster trustworthy AI deployment. In the face of global competition for AI leadership, achieving European excellence in AI will require investments in AI research and innovation that build on Europe’s unique strengths. Recognising this need, the European Commission proposes to build on current networks of AI excellence, leveraging these existing investments to increase the impact of European AI research. Together, these centres can act as a distributed European AI lighthouse – a beacon for European AI research that projects Europe’s influence internationally, while also sharing the benefits of AI technologies across European nations and citizens.
The European Laboratory for Learning and Intelligence Systems (ELLIS) fully supports a multi-centric excellence-driven approach and calls on Governments of EU Member States and Members of the European Parliament to support this proposal in their consideration of the Commission’s AI Strategy and associated legislation.
A pan-European lighthouse aligns with both the EU’s strategic objectives for AI and real- world experiences of which interventions are effective in supporting AI research and adoption. These highlight that:
ELLIS has already demonstrated how a decentralised, pan-European excellence-driven approach to AI research and innovation can help secure European AI leadership. In its first 3 years, it has attracted 3000 applications from students and researchers seeking to work in European AI labs, created a tightly-knit community of more than 800 excellent AI scientists, including 157 ERC grant winners, and built a network of 34 ELLIS units, selected on the basis of scientific excellence, which have committed more than 300M Euro of their own funding for an initial period of five years. The strength of engagement with ELLIS from researchers across the EU illustrates the desire in the European AI community to collaborate in a distributed network that is built on bringing together outstanding scientists who want to make a difference.
ELLIS emphasises the importance to keep the focus on excellence instead of symbolic strength through geographic concentration into a single site. Ideas for a centralised approach in developing the European AI landscape run the risk of undermining the wider goals of the EU's AI strategy. While meeting no immediate need – AI research does not require access to centralised, expensive and unique physical facilities and infrastructures in the way that fields such as particle physics might require – a central research body risks isolating AI research from the sectors, research communities and citizens that it should serve. Faced with a situation where a centralised site in a single member country absorbs large parts of future EU funding, but not the talent (which is the most likely outcome), AI talent currently working at the most dynamic European centres of AI excellence may even consider moving to top AI hotspots overseas.
A multi-centric laboratory with strong institutions in all parts of Europe will generate real innovation for Europe, best leverage Europe’s cultural diversity, and integrate European values in the development of future technology. This will ensure that Europe does not become a mere consumer of AI technology developed elsewhere, building on other values, but instead builds a genuine “AI made in Europe”.
The text is originally published on the ELLIS website.