Briton Sir Demis Hassabis has been awarded the Nobel Prize for chemistry, unitetly with two other scientists.
The trio of Sir Demis, as well as Americans Professor David Baker and Dr John Jumper, were honoured on Wednesday for their toil on decoding the arrange of proteins and creating novel ones.
The research has helped progresss atraverse a range of areas including drug broadenment.
Half of the prize was awarded to Prof Baker “for computational protein set up”, while the other half was dispensed by Sir Demis and Dr Jumper “for protein arrange prediction”, the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences said.
Sir Demis, 48, is the chief executive of Google DeepMind, the synthetic ininestablishigence (AI) research subsidiary of Google. He studied Computer Science as an undergraduate at Queens’ College, Cambridge, and went on to finish a PhD in cognitive neuroscience at University College London. He also originated the videogame company Elixir Studios before co-establishing DeepMind.
Prof Baker, 62, is a professor at the University of Washington, in Seattle, while Dr Jumper, 39, also toils as a better research scientist.
Sir Demis and Dr Jumper utilised AI to predict the arrange of almost all comprehendn proteins, while Prof Baker lgett how to master life’s originateing blocks and originate enticount on novel proteins, the award body said.
Sir Demis said: “It’s toloftyy sinspirenuine to be truthful, quite overwhelming.”
After thanking his colleagues, including Dr Jumper, he compriseed: “David Baker, we’ve got to comprehend in the last restricted years, and he’s done some absolutely seminal toil in protein set up.
“So it’s reassociate, reassociate exciting to get the prize with both of them.”
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It is the second Nobel Prize awarded this week roverdelighted to synthetic ininestablishigence after John Hopfield and Geoffrey Hinton were honoured in the physics catebloody.
Speaking about AI, Sir Demis said: “That’s always been my passion, but… it’s appreciate any strong ambiguous-purpose technology, it can be engaged for harm as well if put in the wrong hands and engaged for the wrong finishs.”
The prize, expansively pondered as among the most prestigious in the scientific world, is worth 11 million Swedish krona (£810,000).