Qatar Computing Research Institute

The Qatar Computing Research Institute (QCRI) in Doha, Qatar, is a nonprofit multidisciplinary computing research institute founded by the Qatar Foundation (QF) for Education, Science and Community Development in 2010. It is primarily funded by the Qatar Foundation, a private, non-profit organization that is supporting Qatar on its journey from carbon economy to knowledge economy by unlocking human potential for the benefit of not only Qatar, but the world. Founded in 1995 by His Highness Sheikh Khalifa bin Hamad Al Thani, Amir of Qatar, QF is chaired by Her Highness Sheikha Mozah bint Nasser Al Missned. QF carries out its mission through three strategic pillars: education, science and research, and community development.[1]

Contents

Background

QCRI is a national research institute specializing in applied computing research. Its research falls into two main categories: core computing and multidisciplinary computing. Within core computing, QCRI specializes in internet computing (with an emphasis on cloud computing and social networking), data analytics, and advanced computer hardware design. Within multidisciplinary computing, QCRI is focused on Arabic language technologies, high performance computing, and bioinformatics.

The QCRI focus is narrow by design. The goal for the institute is to gain recognition by focusing on a small number of areas. For example, the institute sees an opportunity to become a leader in Arabic language technologies, including Arabic-specific natural language processing, machine translation, and optical character recognition.

QCRI has offices in Al Nasr Tower and in Tornado Tower in the West Bay in Doha. QCRI has a staff of 21 employees. Its strategic plan is to have 120 full-time scientists and staff within five years.

Origins

QCRI grew out of a series of meetings held by the Qatari Arab Joint Committee (QAJC) analyzing the needs of Qatar.[2] The group found that Qatar Foundation funded basic computing research at academic institutions worldwide through Qatar National Research Fund (QNRF) and that it incubated the development of new commercial computing products through Qatar Science and Technology Park (QSTP), but it lacked a research organization focused on computing grand challenges that address national priorities for growth and development.

QCRI was established in 2010 with a mandate to tackle large-scale computing challenges relevant to the needs of Qatari stakeholders. The stakeholders include Qatari industry, Qatar’s government, and Qatari society.[3]

Specifically, QCRI’s customers include the petroleum industry, the telecommunications industry, the healthcare industry, and the media industry. The petroleum industry needs advanced computer modeling to assist in the extraction and movement of petroleum products. The telecommunications and datacenter industries need the most advanced research in computing networks, broadband, and other forms of advanced computing infrastructure. The healthcare industry needs efficient and secure management of electronic patient records, clinical information systems, and data interoperability protocols for the exchange and sharing of data. The media industry needs solutions for the cataloging and retrieval of vast amounts of content generated through audio and video, and it needs Arabic language technology solutions to digitize and publish the vast Arabic language corpora.[4] QCRI also works closely with both the basic research institutes in Qatar, including the Education City Universities on their most promising basic research findings. It also will work closely with QSTP to identify the most viable commercial applications of QCRI’s research.

Research Agenda

QCRI is currently addressing several grand challenges in Arabic language technologies:

•The Arabic Language Technology Ecosystem Grand Challenge: Have an Arabic Language Technology research community in the Arab world of 100 specialized researchers, research engineers, and developers. (5 years)

•The Arabic Machine Translation Grand Challenge: Realize Machine Translation for translating text or speech for 20 languages to and from Arabic. (5 years)

•The Arabic Intelligent Support System Grand Challenge: Provide seamless enablement of multimodal Arabic content access and processing in 25% of newly authored software that handle Arabic in the Middle East. (5 years)

•The Arabic Automated Language Tutor Grand Challenge: Assist in Arabic language learning for 1 million students via interactive Arabic language tutor that teaches literacy, phonics, and grammar. (5 years)

•The Seamless Arabic Dialogue System Grand Challenge: Transform 50% of automated commercial customer facing in Qatar to switch to Interactive Voice Response (IVR) systems. (5 years)

•Arabic Content and Search Grand Challenge: Make Arabic a tier 1 language on the web and in the enterprise in terms content, search, and services. (5 years)

Sponsors and partners

QCRI's principal sponsor is the Qatar Foundation for Education, Science and Community Development. QCRI conducts research and development in collaboration with various organizations, including Qatari Diar, Aljazeera Network, Microsoft Research, and Yahoo! QCRI also collaborates with other computing research institutes, including MIT, Columbia University, Waterloo University, and Purdue University.

Directors

The inaugural Executive Director of QCRI is Dr. Ahmed K. Elmagarmid, who was appointed by the executive board of Qatar Foundation in 2010. Its managing director is Dr. Abdellatif Saoudi. The QCRI Executive Director is supported by an executive team consisting of the Managing Director and various Principal Scientists.

References

  1. ^ “About Qatar Computing Research Institute”. Qatar Computing Research Institute. 01 March, 2011. http://www.qcri.org/about/ Retrieved 2011-03-08.
  2. ^ “Qatar Computing Research Institute looks to 'shake computer science'”. Business Intelligence Middle East. 18 August 2010. http://www.bi-me.com/main.php?c=3&cg=3&t=1&id=47875 Retrieved 2011-03-08.
  3. ^ “Main Customers and Stakeholders”. Qatar Computing Research Institute. 01 March, 2011. http://www.qcri.org/about/ Retrieved 2011-03-08.
  4. ^ “Main Customers and Stakeholders”. Qatar Computing Research Institute. 01 March, 2011. http://www.qcri.org/about/ Retrieved 2011-03-08.

External links and sources