Tuesday, November 12, 2024

Google scientists share Nobel Prize in chemistry for AI protein work

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By Kati Pohjanpalo and Mark Bergen | Bloomberg

Two Google DeepMind scientists shared the 2024 Nobel Prize in chemistry with a US professor for their breakthrough research into proteins.

Half of the 11 million-krona ($1.1 million) award will be split by DeepMind chief executive officer, Demis Hassabis, and John M. Jumper, a senior research scientist at the company, a unit of Alphabet Inc.’s Google, the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences in Stockholm said in a statement Wednesday.

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Hassabis and Jumper “developed an AI model to solve a 50-year-old problem: predicting proteins’ complex structures,” from their amino acid sequences, the academy said. The remainder will go to David Baker, a professor at the University of Washington, who built entirely new kinds of proteins, termed by the academy as “an almost impossible feat.”

Hassabis, 48, was a young chess prodigy who studied neuroscience before co-founding DeepMind in London in 2010. Google acquired the AI lab in 2014 and poured resources into the unit. DeepMind was renowned for massive advances in machine intelligence such as its AI model that defeated champions in the game Go.

The scientist has long pushed his researchers to pursue AI applications in chemistry and biology. His lab published key research on AlphaFold in 2020, demonstrating algorithms that could predict the structure of proteins, a breakthrough with major implications for drug discovery and understanding disease.

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