Back
Choi Ching Lam
2022 JC Scholar
More young talents in Hong Kong are entering the field of Artificial Intelligence ("AI") as it gains popularity, Ching Lam being among them. To pursue her interest in computer programming, she participated in the "CUHK Jockey Club AI for the Future Project" over summer vacation in Form Three, which opened the doors to the AI world. She then enrolled in AI-related courses and had the chance to conduct research with university professors while still studying in Form 5.
Ching Lam learns about vision science and perception from Professors Felix Wichmann and Roland Fleming during her exchange in Tübingen, Germany.
Yet life was not always smooth for Ching Lam, who was troubled by attention deficit hyperactivity disorder ("ADHD") in her childhood. She had to work hard to turn this "disorder" into an "advantage". Encouraged by the words of British actor Stephen Fry – "We are not nouns, we are verbs" – she freed herself from the stigma associated with "learning disability" by accepting her own uniqueness and proving herself with actions. "With ADHD, I tend to change tasks or activities constantly, so I have many different interests. I am able to get into different disciplinary areas and observe things that others do not see. This has proven to be useful in my research work."
In recent years AI has gradually integrated itself into human life as a virtual assistant, as Ching Lam expected. In secondary school, she designed an AI program to teach the elderly Tai Chi, and another to assist doctors and nurses in speeding up the diagnosis of COVID-19. The more AI applications are launched, the less they can be predicted by scientists. "We would describe AI as a black box which we are unable to see through or understand," she says, adding that this also means humans cannot estimate its power.
Ching Lam meets Stanford professor and Coursera co-founder, Andrew Ng, pictured at CVPR 2023 (premier AI conference), in Vancouver, Canada.
Ching Lam wants to understand this "black box" through research, safeguarding AI technology and allowing it to be safe and fair, rather than continuously gaining efficiency. Now working as an intern at an AI institute in Canada, she is planning to obtain a Ph.D, so that she can continue her research and become a professor to inspire the next generation.
Ching Lam interns with Dr. Wieland Brendel, group leader at the Max Planck Institute for Intelligent Systems in Tübingen, Germany.
