Numenta
| |
Privately held | |
Industry | Analytics, Artificial Intelligence, Neuroscience |
Founded | February 4, 2005 |
Founder | Jeff Hawkins, Donna Dubinsky, Dileep George |
Headquarters | Redwood City, California, U.S. |
Area served | Worldwide |
Key people |
Donna Dubinsky (CEO), Jeff Hawkins (Co-founder), |
Number of employees | 11-50[1] |
Website |
numenta.com numenta.org |
Wikinews has related news: New company to research artificial brain |
Numenta is a machine intelligence company that has developed a cohesive theory, core software, technology and applications based on the principles of the neocortex. The company was founded on February 4, 2005 by Palm founder Jeff Hawkins with his longtime business partner Donna Dubinsky and Stanford graduate student Dileep George. Numenta is headquartered in Redwood City, California and is privately funded.
Numenta has developed a number of example applications to demonstrate the applicability of its technology. Its first commercial product, Grok, offers anomaly detection for IT analytics, giving insight into IT systems to identify unusual behavior and reduce business downtime. Grok has since been licensed to their strategic partner, Avik Partners. Other applications include stock monitoring, geospatial tracking and rogue behavior.
In addition, Numenta has created NuPIC (Numenta Platform for Intelligent Computing) as an open source project and maintains an open source community discussion forum.
The company name comes from the Latin mentis (“pertaining to the mind”) genitive of mēns (“mind”).[2]
Technology
Numenta's machine intelligence technology is called hierarchical temporal memory (HTM), and is a computational theory of the neocortex.[3] This theory was first described in the book On Intelligence, written in 2004 by Jeff Hawkins and co-author Sandra Blakeslee. At the core of HTM are time-based learning algorithms that store and recall temporal patterns. The HTM algorithms are documented and available through its open source project, NuPIC. The HTM technology is suited to address a number of problems, particularly those with the following characteristics: streaming data, underlying patterns in data change over time, subtle patterns, time-based patterns.[4]
Neuroscience Research
Numenta focuses on large-scale brain theory and simulation. Numenta researchers work with experimentalists and published results to derive an understanding of the neocortex. Their main research focus areas are cortical columns, sequence learning and sparse distributed representations. They have written a number of peer-reviewed journal papers and research reports on these topics.
Business Model
Numenta is a technology provider and does not create go-to-market solutions for specific use cases. The company licenses their technology and application code to developers, organizations and companies who wish to build upon their technology."[5] Numenta has several different types of licenses, including open source licenses, trial licenses and commercial licenses. Developers can use Numenta technology within NuPIC using the AGPL v3 open source license.
Applications
The following commercial applications are available using NuPIC:
- Grok - anomaly detection for IT servers, see www.grokstream.com
- Cortical.io - advanced natural language processing, see www.cortical.io
The following tools are available on NuPIC:
- HTM Studio - find anomalies in time series using your own data, see www.numenta.com/htm-studio/
- Numenta Anomaly Benchmark - compare HTM anomalies with other anomaly detection techniques, see https://numenta.com/numenta-anomaly-benchmark/
The following example applications are available on NuPIC, see http://numenta.com/applications/:
- HTM for Stocks - example of tracking anomalies in the stock market (sample code)
- Rogue behavior detection - example of finding anomalies in human behavior (white paper and sample code)
- Geospatial tracking - example of finding anomalies in objectives moving through space and time (white paper and sample code)
Partnerships
Numenta works with strategic partners, who license their technology and build products using HTM. Cortical.io is using HTM for natural language processing, the partnership was announced in May 2015.[6] Avik Partners has licensed their Grok for IT Analytics application to monitor IT servers.[7] The partnership was announced in August 2015. Numenta also partners with various research institutions and universities.
Open Source Community
The Numenta Platform for Intelligent Computing (NuPIC) is an open source platform and community for machine intelligence based on HTM theory. NuPIC is an implementation of HTM and can be used to analyze streaming data. Numenta first announced in June 2013 that it would open-source its HTM technology, the core of its software and algorithms. This was accompanied by the new Numenta.org website[8] and a mailing list for community members.
Community members are contributors from around the world, and topics on the mailing list have included both discussions of the HTM theory as well as details of development of the software. The mission of NuPIC is to build and support a community, that is interested in machine learning and machine intelligence based on modeling the neocortex and its principles.[9]
Numenta has hosted a series of hackathons, the first one in 2013, to bring community members together to collaborate on NuPIC and its applications.
Criticisms
NuPIC supports a version of Python that is scheduled for obsolescence in 2020.[10][11] There is at this time no active plan to update it to support a modern version of Python.[10]
References
- ↑ Numenta Crunchbase Profile
- ↑ Numenta Official Website
- ↑ HTM Cortical Learning Algorithms
- ↑ Numenta Machine Intelligence Technology
- ↑ Numenta Licensing Guide
- ↑ Numenta and Cortical.io Form Strategic Partnership
- ↑ Numenta Announces Licensing of Grok for IT Analytics to Avik Partners
- ↑ Numenta.org website
- ↑ HTM Forum
- 1 2 "Python 3.x support".
- ↑ "Python 2.7 Countdown".
External links
- Official website
- Gigaom Article on Numenta's Approach to AI
- VentureBeat article "After Nine Years of Research Numenta Finally has Apps that Mimic the Way the Brain Works'
- Gartner Fellows Interview with Jeff Hawkins Founder of Numenta on 2 March 2006
- Wired magazine article underlying details and giving background information on Numenta.
- Guardian Newspaper 10 April 2008 article providing a general introduction to Numenta.
- "The Brainy Learning Algorithms of Numenta" December 2010 article in Technology Review
- Videos from 2015 Spring NuPIC Hackathon. Available at the AV-Portal of the German National Library of Science and Technology (TIB)