Artificial intelligence and chemistry
Artificial intelligence and chemistry
Following the 100 Year Anniversary of IUPAC celebrated in Paris in 2019, Artificial Intelligence was made the focus of the following global 2021 World Chemistry Leadership Meeting (WCLM).[*] Once it was clear the prevailing COVID-19 conditions would mean that the 2021 WCLM would be virtual, the planning committee decided to take advantage of an online setting to have a truly global meeting and to have the event follow the sun round the world using three time zones and “visiting” the next two IUPAC Congress sites, i.e. The Netherlands 2023 and Malaysia 2025.
IUPAC first 100 years and the World Chemistry Leadership Meeting
As the form of the meeting took shape, I was asked to give the closing talk bringing together the ideas raised by the speakers in their recorded talks, the highlights of the discussions in Malaysia and The Netherlands, the panel led from Montréal, and perhaps even suggest directions for IUPAC to take the lead in the transformation of chemistry as a science in the digital age. Which is why the title of my closing keynote was, “How do we shape the future?”.
Frey, Jeremy G.
ba60c559-c4af-44f1-87e6-ce69819bf23f
14 April 2022
Frey, Jeremy G.
ba60c559-c4af-44f1-87e6-ce69819bf23f
Frey, Jeremy G.
(2022)
Artificial intelligence and chemistry.
Chemistry International, 44 (2).
(doi:10.1515/ci-2022-0202).
Abstract
Following the 100 Year Anniversary of IUPAC celebrated in Paris in 2019, Artificial Intelligence was made the focus of the following global 2021 World Chemistry Leadership Meeting (WCLM).[*] Once it was clear the prevailing COVID-19 conditions would mean that the 2021 WCLM would be virtual, the planning committee decided to take advantage of an online setting to have a truly global meeting and to have the event follow the sun round the world using three time zones and “visiting” the next two IUPAC Congress sites, i.e. The Netherlands 2023 and Malaysia 2025.
IUPAC first 100 years and the World Chemistry Leadership Meeting
As the form of the meeting took shape, I was asked to give the closing talk bringing together the ideas raised by the speakers in their recorded talks, the highlights of the discussions in Malaysia and The Netherlands, the panel led from Montréal, and perhaps even suggest directions for IUPAC to take the lead in the transformation of chemistry as a science in the digital age. Which is why the title of my closing keynote was, “How do we shape the future?”.
Text
10.1515_ci-2022-0202
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e-pub ahead of print date: 14 April 2022
Published date: 14 April 2022
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Local EPrints ID: 456927
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/456927
ISSN: 1365-2192
PURE UUID: 96e1f4a2-b487-4f34-b5c5-ed486478ad9a
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Date deposited: 17 May 2022 16:47
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 02:33
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