Global Big Data Conference

#artificialintelligence 

Artificial intelligence is helping computers drive cars, recognize faces in a crowd, and hold life-like conversations. General Electric engineers now say they've used the data-intensive technology to develop tools that could cut the industrial giant's design process for jet engines and power turbines in at least half, speeding up its next generation of products. Today, it might take two days for engineers to run a computational analysis of the fluid dynamics of a single design for a turbine blade or an engine component. Scientists at General Electric's research center in Niskayuna, New York, say they've leveraged machine learning to train a surrogate model so that it can evaluate a million different variations of a design in just 15 minutes. "This is, we think, a huge breakthrough," says Robert Zacharias, technology director of thermosciences at GE Research.