Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Archives | FedScoop https://fedscoop.com/tag/pacific-northwest-national-laboratory/ FedScoop delivers up-to-the-minute breaking government tech news and is the government IT community's platform for education and collaboration through news, events, radio and TV. FedScoop engages top leaders from the White House, federal agencies, academia and the tech industry both online and in person to discuss ways technology can improve government, and to exchange best practices and identify how to achieve common goals. Thu, 09 Nov 2023 22:28:30 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.4 https://fedscoop.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/5/2023/01/cropped-fs_favicon-3.png?w=32 Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Archives | FedScoop https://fedscoop.com/tag/pacific-northwest-national-laboratory/ 32 32 Government leaders share strategies for embracing AI at federal innovation summit https://fedscoop.com/government-leaders-share-strategies-for-embracing-ai-at-federal-innovation-summit/ Fri, 03 Nov 2023 19:10:42 +0000 https://fedscoop.com/?p=74423 Great innovation comes from partnering together, says Microsoft's Federal senior vice president at a gathering of federal leaders on harnessing artificial intelligence.

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Technology and innovation leaders from the Office of Management and Budget, the Federal Reserve, the Department of State, the U.S. Air Force, the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory and other agencies highlighted how artificial intelligence (AI) is revolutionizing government operations and services at a federal forum on November 1.

In a series of panel discussions at the “Federal Innovation Series: Leading in the Era of AI” event, agency officials and technology experts from Microsoft touched on ways government agencies are harnessing AI to enhance mission support, ensure responsible innovation, and bolster cybersecurity. The event was presented by FedScoop and sponsored by Microsoft.

Candice Ling, senior vice president of Microsoft’s federal business, kicked off the conference with a call to action for government agencies to embark on a transformational journey through a process of co-innovation and collaboration to modernize government operations. Ling highlighted Microsoft’s commitment to responsible and ethical AI solutions to safeguard government systems. She stressed how the company’s principles for responsible AI — including accountability, inclusiveness, reliability, safety, fairness, transparency, and privacy and security — and Microsoft’s experience working with federal agencies can help agencies capitalize on AI to innovate faster and more effectively.

Eileen Vidrine, chief data and AI officer at the Department of Air Force, outlined the department’s goals to provide the necessary framework to “operationalize data and AI for decision advantage” and to be “AI-ready by 2025 and AI-competitive by 2027.” She also reiterated the importance of partnerships across the Air Force, the Defense Department, industry and academia to keep pace with AI’s potential.

Federal Reserve System Chief Innovation Officer Sunayna Tuteja spoke about the importance of problem-solving and the need for appropriate guardrails when designing AI solutions. She encouraged government leaders in the audience to understand but get comfortable with the risks of AI and embrace innovation’s inherent uncertainty. The public sector doesn’t spend enough time thinking about the risk of not doing something, she told the audience.

Chris DeRusha, Federal CISO at OMB, Ginny Badanes, senior director at Microsoft Democracy Forward, and Glen Johnson, chief technology officer at the Department of State, delved into AI’s role in revolutionizing government cybersecurity. AI dramatically expands the capacity of federal agencies to detect anomalies, analyze data, and automate responses to cyber threats, they said.

Pritha Mehra, CIO of the U.S. Postal Service, revealed how USPS is leveraging AI to provide “accurate predictions of where your package is, when it’s going to be delivered and within the exact time.” AI is also helping USPS to document and rewrite legacy code, automate customer calls concerning passport applications and increase its ability to detect fraud, she said.

Brian Abrahamson, associate laboratory director and chief digital officer at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, urged attendees to educate themselves on the possibilities of AI. He emphasized the importance of pilot projects and shared examples of AI’s transformative applications.

Michael Pencina, chief data scientist at Duke Health and vice dean for data science at the Duke University School of Medicine, joined Jennifer Rostami, assistant commissioner at the General Services Administration’s Technology Transformation Services unit, to discuss the need for ground rules around AI. They underscored the importance of ensuring transparency, trustworthiness, and fairness in applying AI in government. Building trust through governance frameworks and developing blueprints for employees and partners are critical steps public sector leaders need to take, they said.

Also speaking at the event were Patricia O’Neill-Brown, senior advisor at the Defense Intelligence; Kimberly Sablon, principal director for trusted AI and autonomy at the Department of Defense; and James-Christian Blockwood, executive vice president at the Partnership for Public Service. Adding additional perspective from Microsoft were Corporate Vice President, U.S. Government Affairs Fred Humphries; Microsoft Federal General Manager Brian Keith; Director for AI Public Policy Danyelle Solomon; Federal Security CTO Steve Faehl; and Vice President Federal Civilian Heidi Kobylski.

The innovation summit came on the heels of a landmark executive order focused on artificial intelligence and new OMB guidance issued by the Biden administration earlier in the week.

Also noted during the event was a new research report, “Gauging the impact of Generative AI on Government,” released by FedScoop last month, which examined how federal agency leaders are preparing to adopt AI. Microsoft underwrote the report.

Learn more about how AI can support government services from Microsoft.

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DOE national laboratory adds Verizon’s first federal 5G Lab https://fedscoop.com/national-laboratory-5g-doe/ https://fedscoop.com/national-laboratory-5g-doe/#respond Mon, 09 Mar 2020 20:36:12 +0000 https://fedscoop.com/?p=35814 Pacific Northwest National Laboratory is partnering with Verizon Business to develop cybersecurity that will underpin 5G for critical infrastructure, AI and IoT.

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A Department of Energy national laboratory will host Verizon Business’ first 5G wireless lab for testing government technologies, the company announced Monday.

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory’s main campus in Richland, Washington, specializes in advanced mobile communications research and development for DOE and will test Verizon’s 5G Ultra Wideband service in order to advise other agencies on deployment.

Government researchers and outside developers working on behalf of agencies like the Department of Defense, DOE and Department of Homeland Security will develop 5G applications supporting Internet of Things and artificial intelligence technologies in the realms of national security, energy efficiency and public safety.

“They can take the smartest people in government that work for PNNL and really ideate and, with their folks on R&D, collaborate with us to explore how 5G can really transform the work that the federal government does,” Mike Maiorana, senior vice president of federal sales at Verizon, told FedScoop.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s_zRK8FBvVs

Verizon has been “deliberate and prescriptive” in launching 5G across 34 cities and five 5G Labs in places including Washington, D.C., Maiorana added.

PNNL will work with Verizon to refine how the company designs and deploys 5G, functionality and physical and cybersecurity.

“With Verizon, we plan to explore how cybersecurity will underpin 5G for critical infrastructure and how 5G will drive transformation in the protection of endpoint devices, advancement of artificial intelligence, the science behind autonomous systems and related internet of things applications,” said Scott Godwin, general manager of corporate partnerships and alliances at PNNL, in the announcement.

The lab will, in turn,  advise agencies on how 5G might impact their operations and infrastructure based on its testing.

“They’re going to help us ensure that we are designing, deploying and operating the most secure 5G network that the industry can deliver,” Maiorana said.

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