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Berkeley Lab AI Science Summit Fuels Collaboration to Tackle Scientific Challenges

November 6, 2024

By Linda Vu
Contact: cscomms@lbl.gov

Person standing on stage next to a screen with the words Welcome to the Berkeley Lab AI for Science Summit 2024 projected onto it.

Scientific Data Division's Ben Erichson opens Berkeley Lab’s Artificial Intelligence Science Summit. (Photo by Elizabeth Ball, Berkeley Lab)

Last month, over 100 academics, researchers, industry experts, and national lab staff gathered at Berkeley Lab’s Artificial Intelligence Science Summit (BLASS) to explore AI’s potential to drive scientific discovery. 

The two-day workshop focused on key advancements in AI for science and engineering. This year's theme was spatiotemporal data challenges in various fields, such as climate science, seismology, and fluid mechanics.

“The Bay Area is a global hub for AI and scientific research, with leading institutions like UC Berkeley, Stanford, and national labs such as Berkeley Lab, Lawrence Livermore, and SLAC working alongside tech giants like Google, Meta, and others. With BLASS, we aimed to bring this expertise together in an intimate setting to spark conversation and foster collaborations that will tackle the complex scientific challenges shaping the future of research and innovation,” said Ben Erichson, BLASS Co-Organizer and a researcher in the Machine Learning and Analytics Group in Berkeley Lab’s Scientific Data Division. 

According to Erichson, he and BLASS co-organizer Wahid Bhimji, who leads the National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center’s (NERSC’s) Data and AI Services Group, have both attended and contributed to numerous AI workshops and meetings. They noticed strong enthusiasm for collaboration between the machine learning and scientific communities but saw the need for a more research-oriented event to foster meaningful collaboration. That’s when the idea for BLASS was born.

In addition to program talks, the summit also included a poster session reception hosted in collaboration with the International Computer Science Institute (ICSI). Bhimji notes that this aspect of BLASS offered an opportunity for attendees to mingle and learn from each other. 

“The excitement around this topic was palpable throughout the summit—you could see lively conversations and people lining up to ask our speakers questions. Although the poster started at 4 p.m., many people stayed well into the evening to talk to each other and learn about the work that was going on in this space,” said Erichson.  

Bhimji sees BLASS as part of a broader ecosystem of complementary events designed to help the scientific research community harness emerging AI technologies. For developing community expertise in AI for science, Berkeley Lab plans to host an AI for Science Bootcamp next June that will be a follow-up of previous lab-hosted deep learning for science summer schools. BLASS, which Bhimji and Erichson plan to make an annual event, will foster collaborations between experienced researchers and industry partners.

Presenter stands in front of a screen with technical graphs and speaks to a crowded room.

Google's Stephan Hoyer talks about AI-based weather and climate modeling with NeuralGCM at Berkeley Lab's AI Science Summit. (Photo by Elizabeth Ball, NERSC).

“In discussions about national lab and academic collaborations with industry partners, many have raised concerns about data privacy, cybersecurity, and a host of other issues. My personal view is that these concerns shouldn’t deter us from collaborating. By having an organization like Berkeley Lab serve as the nexus connecting these communities through events like BLASS, we can ensure we’re central to addressing those concerns,” said Bhimji. 

In addition to Bhimji and Erichson, the other BLASS co-organizers were Berkeley Lab Applied Math and Computational Research Division (AMCR) Research Scientist Zhi Jackie Yao, NERSC Machine Learning Engineer Steven Farrell, and NERSC Postdoc Vinicius Mikuni.  


About Berkeley Lab

Founded in 1931 on the belief that the biggest scientific challenges are best addressed by teams, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and its scientists have been recognized with 16 Nobel Prizes. Today, Berkeley Lab researchers develop sustainable energy and environmental solutions, create useful new materials, advance the frontiers of computing, and probe the mysteries of life, matter, and the universe. Scientists from around the world rely on the Lab’s facilities for their own discovery science. Berkeley Lab is a multiprogram national laboratory, managed by the University of California for the U.S. Department of Energy’s Office of Science.

DOE’s Office of Science is the single largest supporter of basic research in the physical sciences in the United States, and is working to address some of the most pressing challenges of our time. For more information, please visit energy.gov/science.