“Ambient intelligence" will accelerate advances in general AI

Alexa’s chief scientist on how customer-obsessed science is accelerating general intelligence.

As the world has become more connected, and computing has permeated our surroundings, a new AI paradigm is emerging: ambient intelligence. In this paradigm, our environment responds to our requests and anticipates our needs, provides information or suggests actions, and then recedes into the background.

Rohit Prasad.jpg
Rohit Prasad, Alexa head scientist and senior vice president at Amazon.

This vision of ambient intelligence is not that different from the one on Star Trek. But for most of the last decade, the focus has been reactive assistance — for example, ensuring that customer-initiated requests to Alexa meet customers’ expectations.

In the ambient-intelligence vision, an AI service such as Alexa makes sense of the state of your environment, including devices, sensors, objects, people, and activity around you, to help you in every situation where you need assistance — either reactively (customer initiated) or proactively (AI initiated).

Realizing the ultimate potential of ambient intelligence requires Alexa to bring the best of machine-intelligence capabilities together with the best of human-intelligence capabilities, which is the barometer of general intelligence today.

The most pragmatic definition of general intelligence is the ability to (1) learn multiple tasks jointly, versus modeling each task independently; (2) continually adapt to changes within a set of known tasks, without explicit human supervision; and (3) learn new tasks directly by interacting with end users.

While these general-intelligence characteristics apply to all types of AI systems, for interactive AI services such as Alexa, two more attributes are critical: (1) multisensory and multimodal intelligence — the ability to process data from multiple input sensors (e.g., microphones, cameras, ultrasound), fuse sensor data for improved understanding of customer goals, and generate output in different modalities (e.g., speech, text, image, video); and (2) interaction skills — the ability to converse in a human-like manner, which encompasses not just command of natural language but also the ability to recognize and respond to affect.

What this means for our customers is that Alexa will become

  • More competent: Alexa’s functionalities and skills will expand much faster through multitask intelligence. Additionally, Alexa will improve through self-learning, becoming less reliant on labeled data;
  • More natural and conversational: Alexa interactions will be as free flowing as human interactions through multisensory intelligence, generalizable language models, commonsense reasoning, and affect modeling; 
  • More personalized: Alexa will adapt to each individual using speech and computer vision. Further, customers will be able to directly personalize Alexa explicitly and implicitly;  
  • More insightful and proactive: Alexa will anticipate customer needs through awareness of the shared environment, make suggestions, and even act on customers’ behalf;  
  • More trustworthy:  Alexa will have the same attributes that we cherish in trustworthy people, such as discretion, fairness, and ethical behavior.

In the past year, Alexa has made considerable progress on all these fronts.

More competent

Alexa receives billions of requests per month, and it is critical for it to answer each of these requests to customers’ satisfaction. In 2021, through advances in automatic speech recognition (ASR), natural-language understanding (NLU), and action resolution, Alexa has become 13% more accurate than the previous year — even as the complexity of customer requests has increased.

Alexa has more than 130,000 third-party skills, whose diversity is a testament to their developers’ creativity. Further, it is available in more than 15 language variants across more than 80 countries, most recently Khaleeji Arabic in Saudi Arabia.

Through advances in large pretrained language models, we are making it easier to expand Alexa’s functionality in terms of both skills and languages. Specifically, we have trained an “Alexa Teacher Model,” a large, pretrained, multilingual model with billions of parameters that encodes language as well as salient patterns of interactions with Alexa. Instead of building new task-specific NLU models (e.g., a skill, a feature, or a language) from scratch on task-specific data, we can build them by fine-tuning the Alexa Teacher model, which provides substantial gains in performance from the same amount of task-specific training data.

While today, the Alexa Teacher Model itself is impractical for real-time language understanding, once it is distilled and fine-tuned, it is compact enough to run in real time but remains more accurate than a similar-sized model trained from scratch. The capacity to generalize across tasks, which the language model enables, is one of the hallmarks of general intelligence.

ATM pipeline.png
The Alexa Teacher Model (AlexaTM) pipeline. The Alexa Teacher Model is trained on a large set of GPUs (left), then distilled into smaller variants (center), whose size depends on their uses. The end user adapts a distilled model to its particular use by fine-tuning it on in-domain data (right).

Models derived from the Alexa Teacher Model have helped reduce customer friction in several locales and will help facilitate and scale multilingual and multimodal use cases in coming years.

Still, faster deployment of new functionality is not sufficient. Customer interactions with Alexa are ever evolving, so Alexa needs to improve continuously. To that end, we have expanded Alexa’s self-learning capability — in particular, its ability to automatically learn from implicit feedback, e.g., when a customer cuts Alexa off in order to rephrase a query.

Currently, we have two methods for learning from implicit feedback. One is a mechanism that learns to automatically reformulate the ASR output to ensure a more accurate response, and the other automatically annotates interaction data to enable the retraining of NLU models with minimal human involvement.

At this year’s Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing (EMNLP), Alexa AI researchers presented papers reporting our progress on both these fronts.

Learning how to rewrite customer requests requires identifying which successful requests are rephrases of unsuccessful ones. Past work on rephrase detection considered sentences in pairs, determining the likelihood that one is a rephrase of the other. In our EMNLP paper, we explain how to use temporal features of the dialogue history to better identify rephrases, with an accuracy improvement of 28% on one test dataset.

Rephrases.png
Earlier rephrase detection models computed similarity scores between pairs of queries (right), which could lead to inaccuracies. A new model instead uses full dialogue context (left) to more accurately detect rephrases by leveraging session-level semantic information. From “Contextual rephrase detection for reducing friction in dialogue systems”.

In the other paper, we describe a scalable framework for using automatically annotated data to continually update our NLU models. This paper shows how to operationalize our previous work on automatic annotation, to deliver immediate results to our customers.

More natural and conversational

As magical as it is to interact with Alexa by simply saying its name, repeating the name during longer interactions feels unnatural: when we’re talking to other people, we don’t use their names on every turn.

This year, we took a major step toward making interactions with Alexa more natural through Conversation Mode, which leverages Echo Show 10’s camera to enable wake-word-free interactions by improving the detection of device directedness (i.e., the intent of addressing Alexa) — even when there are multiple people in the room, conversing with each other as well as with Alexa.

Conversation Mode uses novel computer vision algorithms to gauge customers’ physical orientations toward the device, which indicate whether they’re addressing Alexa or each other. The combination of visual and audio information dramatically improves device-directed-speech detection relative to either modality used independently. Further, on-device speech recognition using fully neural recurrent-neural-network transducers ensures that Alexa recognizes conversational speech with low latency.

We have also started extending Alexa’s conversational memory, going beyond anaphoric references within an interaction session (e.g., “What is its resolution?” while shopping for TVs) to temporarily maintain memory across sessions in certain situations. For example, for high-consideration purchases such as TVs, Alexa remembers your last interaction and starts off your next interaction where you left off. This capability required us to extend Alexa Conversations, which trains deep-learning-based models on synthetic data automatically generated from a small amount of developer-provided data.

As effective as large neural transformer-based language models are for generating textual responses, they lack the commonsense and knowledge grounding they need to be truly useful in large-scale human-machine interactions. This fall, to help foster the type of invention needed to overcome these challenges, we released the commonsense dialogue dataset, which consists of more than 11,000 newly collected dialogues. In each dialogue, successive turns are related by relationship triples in the public commonsense knowledge graph Conceptnet, such as <doctor, LocateAt, hospital> or <specialist, TypeOf, doctor>.

Commonsense dialogue.png
In each dialogue in the commonsense-dialogue dataset, successive turns are related by relationship triples in the public commonsense knowledge graph Conceptnet, such as <piano, RelatedTo, musical> or <musical, RelatedTo, violin>.

Another way to inject common sense into dialogue models is to enable them to import information from online or other sources as needed, on the fly. At the NeurIPS Workshop on Efficient Natural Language and Speech Processing (ENLSP) earlier this month, Alexa researchers won a best-paper award for doing just that. They propose a few-shot-learning approach to training a knowledge-seeking-turn detector, which can recognize customer questions that can’t be answered through existing API calls.

This year, we also published several papers on affect modeling. At the International Conference on Acoustics, Speech, and Signal Processing, we presented the use of contrastive unsupervised learning to improve emotion recognition when training data is scarce; and at the Spoken Language Technologies conference, we described the adaptation of pretrained language models, which have been so successful at natural-language-processing tasks, to the problem of social and emotional commonsense reasoning.

On the flip side, when human speakers recognize shifts in the emotional states of people they’re talking to, they modify the affect in their responses. At the Speech Synthesis Workshop (SSW11) this summer, we extended our previous work on prosody variation to modify the affective characteristics of synthesized speech.

More personalized

AI’s ability to conform to customers as opposed to the other way around differentiates it from other technological advancements. This fall, we launched multiple new services that allow our customers to personalize AI in a self-serve fashion.

With preference teaching, customers can explicitly teach Alexa which skills should handle weather-related questions, which sports teams they follow, and which cuisines they prefer.

CustomAED_embedding.png
A two-dimensional projection of embeddings produced through Custom Sound Event Detection. New sounds are identified by their location in the embedding space.

With Custom Sound Event Detection, customers can train Alexa to recognize new sounds — such as a doorbell ringing — from just a handful of examples. Custom Sound Event Detection uses proximity in a neural network’s representational space to recognize instances of the same sound.

Custom Event Alerts for Ring Video Doorbell cameras and Spotlight cameras works in a similar way. With just a few examples, customers can train their devices to recognize certain states of affairs in the world — such as a shed door that has been left open.

In August, we introduced adaptive volume for Alexa, which lets Echo devices adjust their volume according to ambient-noise levels, so that the perceived noise level stays consistent for the customer. One of the key elements of the approach is algorithmically separating the speech signal and the noise signal, so that they’re separate inputs to the volume adaptation model.

We also launched adaptive listening for US English, an opt-in feature that gives customers more time to finish speaking before Alexa responds, making Alexa a more accessible, patient listener. For speakers with certain speech impediments, adaptive listening has reduced the friction in their Alexa interactions by more than two-thirds.

Finally, Alexa customers can choose to interact with celebrity personalities such as Amitabh Bachchan, Melissa McCarthy, Samuel L. Jackson, or Shaquille O'Neal. At the end of the year, we even brought holiday cheer to Alexa interactions by launching the festive personality of Santa Claus.

More insightful and proactive

Today, one in four smart-home interactions is initiated by Alexa, due to the expansion of its predictive and proactive features such as hunches and routines.

Since 2018, Alexa hunches have recognized anomalies in customers’ daily routines and suggested corrections — noticing that a light was left on at night and offering to turn it off, for instance. This year, we gave customers the option of making hunches more proactive, so Alexa can act on their behalf. When proactive hunches are enabled, Alexa will turn that light off for you without asking first.

Routines let you initiate a sequence of actions with a single trigger word, rather than issuing the same instructions over and over again. Previously, customers had to specify which actions they wanted to string together. But this year, we began phasing in inferred routines. With inferred routines, Alexa recognizes sequences of actions that customers commonly repeat — such as, say, turning on the kitchen lights, starting the coffee maker, and playing the “Wake Up!” playlist — and suggests combining them into a routine. To save the routine, the customer simply accepts Alexa’s suggestion.

We have also continued to expand latent-goal prediction, where Alexa recognizes the larger customer need implied by an initial request and suggests actions or skills to fulfill that need. For instance, a customer asks, “Who won the Celtics game?”, and after answering, Alexa asks, “Would you like to know when the Celtics are playing next?”

Latent-goal prediction uses pointwise mutual information to measure the likelihood of an interaction pattern in a given context relative to its likelihood across all Alexa traffic, and it uses bandit learning to track whether recommendations are helping or not and suppress underperforming experiences.

We have also introduced visual ID on our latest Echo device, Echo Show 15. With visual ID, Alexa shows notes and other reminders just for you (e.g., “Leave a note for Jack that his new passport has arrived”). Visual ID is also available on Astro, an Alexa-enabled home robot that extends environment and state awareness to your physical space. Astro can follow you playing media or find you to deliver calls, messages, timers, alarms, or reminders. With a Ring Protect prosubscription, Astro can also proactively patrol your home and investigate anomalous activities.

More trustworthy

Preserving customer privacy is an uncompromisable tenet for us and an invention area. Differential privacy in particular is one of our key areas of focus. This year, we won a best-paper award at the annual meeting of the Florida Artificial Intelligence Research Society (FLAIRS) for an approach to improving the performance of machine learning models while still meeting the privacy standards imposed by differential-privacy analysis.

At the Conference of the European Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics, we presented a method for protecting privacy by automatically rephrasing training text while preserving their semantic sense, in a way that, again, meets differential-privacy standards.

Biased language models still.jpg
Alexa AI researchers constructed a dataset of more than 23,000 text generation prompts, each consisting of six to nine words of a sentence on Wikipedia. The prompts can be used to test language models for bias.
Credit: Glynis Condon

We want Alexa to work equally well for everyone. To that end, in addition to our partnership with the National Science Foundation in the area of fairness in AI, we are pursuing research into detecting and mitigating inappropriate bias. At the ACM Conference on Fairness, Accountability, and Transparency (FAccT) and the Conference of the European Association for Computational Linguistics, we published a pair of papers on measuring bias in language models and detecting bias in datasets for training models that recognize unreliable news.

The path ahead

I recognize that there are multiple paths to general AI, each with years of fundamental research ahead of it. I believe Alexa and its underlying vision of ambient intelligence offer a pragmatic path to general AI— one where every advancement makes Alexa more useful for our customers in their daily lives.

I am in awe at the rate of invention from the Alexa team in the most difficult circumstances. As we wrap up yet another year of the COVID pandemic, I hope the advances the worldwide community of AI researchers is making in every discipline of AI will help us prevent future pandemics.

Research areas

Related content

US, WA, Seattle
The Mission of Amazon's Artificial General Intelligence (AGI) team is to "Build world-class general-purpose intelligence services that benefits every Amazon business and humanity." Are you a data enthusiast and explorer? Are you someone who is passionate about using data to direct decision making and solve complex and large-scale challenges? If so, then this position is for you! In this role, you will apply advanced analytics and data science techniques, AI/ML, and statistical concepts to derive insights from massive datasets and work on LLMs to build future of Personalization in Conversational Assistants. The ideal candidate should have expertise in AI/ML, statistical analysis, and the ability to write code for building models and pipelines to automate data and analytics processing. They will help us design experiments, build and fine-tune models, and develop appropriate metrics to deeply understand the strengths and weaknesses of science artifacts. They will build dashboards to automate data collection and reporting of relevant data streams, providing leadership and stakeholders with transparency into our system's performance. They will turn their findings into actions by writing detailed reports and providing recommendations on where we should focus our efforts to have the largest customer impact. Key job responsibilities A successful candidate will be a self-starter, comfortable with ambiguity with strong attention to detail, and have the ability to work in a fast-paced and ever-changing environment. They will also help coach/mentor junior scientists in the team. The ideal candidate should possess excellent verbal and written communication skills, capable of effectively communicating results and insights to both technical and non-technical audiences We are open to hiring candidates to work out of one of the following locations: Bellevue, WA, USA | Seattle, WA, USA
GB, London
Economic Decision Science is a central science team working across a variety of topics in the EU Stores business and beyond. We work closely EU business leaders to drive change at Amazon. We focus on solving long-term, ambiguous and challenging problems, while providing advisory support to help solve short-term business pain points. Key topics include pricing, product selection, delivery speed, profitability, and customer experience. We tackle these issues by building novel econometric models, machine learning systems, and high-impact experiments which we integrate into business, financial, and system-level decision making. Our work is highly collaborative and we regularly partner with EU- and US-based interdisciplinary teams. We are looking for a Senior Economist who is able to provide structure around complex business problems, hone those complex problems into specific, scientific questions, and test those questions to generate insights. The ideal candidate will work with various science, engineering, operations and analytics teams to estimate models and algorithms on large scale data, design pilots and measure their impact, and transform successful prototypes into improved policies and programs at scale. If you have an entrepreneurial spirit, you know how to deliver results fast, and you have a deeply quantitative, highly innovative approach to solving problems, and long for the opportunity to build pioneering solutions to challenging problems, we want to talk to you. Key job responsibilities - Provide data-driven guidance and recommendations on strategic questions facing the EU Retail leadership - Scope, design and implement version-zero (V0) models and experiments to kickstart new initiatives, thinking, and drive system-level changes across Amazon - Build a long-term research agenda to understand, break down, and tackle the most stubborn and ambiguous business challenges - Influence business leaders and work closely with other scientists at Amazon to deliver measurable progress and change We are open to hiring candidates to work out of one of the following locations: London, GBR
US, WA, Seattle
The JP Economics and Decision Science Team is looking for an Intern Economist with experience in empirical economic analysis to conduct research on the impact evaluation and prediction of marketing campaigns in Amazon Japan's online retail business. The successful candidate will work closely with the team to improve the efficiency of designing marketing campaigns. We are looking for detail-oriented, organized, and responsible individuals who are eager to learn how to work with large and complicated data sets. Knowledge of econometrics and applied microeconomics and familiarity with Stata, R, or Python are necessary. Experience with SQL would be a plus, but not required. These are full-time positions at 40 hours per week, with compensation being awarded on an hourly basis. You will work in a team of economists, data scientists, and engineers and in collaboration with product and finance managers. These skills will translate well into writing applied chapters in your dissertation and provide you with work experience that may help you with placement. Roughly 85% of interns from previous cohorts have converted to full time economics employment at Amazon. If you are interested, please send your CV to our mailing list at econ-internship@amazon.com. Key job responsibilities • Use regression analysis to estimate econometric models and develop forecasting solutions that can predict marketing campaign effectiveness. • Collaborate with other economists and data scientists to validate and refine the econometric models. • Work with product managers and software developers to integrate the forecasting models into the campaign management system. • Monitor the accuracy and effectiveness of the forecasting models and make adjustments as necessary. • Communicate your findings and recommendations to team members and stakeholders. A day in the life - Discussions with business partners, as well as product managers and tech leaders to understand the business problem. - Brainstorming with other scientists and economists to design the right model for the problem in hand. - Present the results and new ideas for existing or forward looking problems to leadership. - Deep dive into the data. - Modeling and creating working prototypes. - Analyze the results and review with partners. About the team We are a team of economists, data scientists, and business intelligence engineers supporting Amazon Japan's Customer Growth and Engagement (CGE) org as the one-stop data science enabler. We use analytical insights and products to empower CGE and align strategic decisions across partner teams (e.g., Operations, Delivery Experience, Pricing). We are open to hiring candidates to work out of one of the following locations: Seattle, WA, USA
US, WA, Bellevue
The Fulfillment by Amazon (FBA) team is looking for a passionate, curious, and creative Senior Applied Scientist, with expertise in machine learning and a proven record of solving business problems through scalable ML solutions, to join our top-notch cross-domain FBA science team. We want to learn seller behaviors, understand seller experience, build automated LLM-based solutions to sellers, design seller policies and incentives, and develop science products and services that empower third-party sellers to grow their businesses. We also predict potentially costly defects that may occur during packing, shipping, receiving and storing the inventory. We aim to prevent such defects before occurring while we are also fulfilling customer demand as quickly and efficiently as possible, in addition to managing returns and reimbursements. To do so, we build and innovate science solutions at the intersection of machine learning, statistics, economics, operations research, and data analytics. As a senior applied scientist, you will propose and deploy solutions that will likely draw from a range of scientific areas such as supervised and unsupervised learning, recommendation systems, statistical learning, LLMs, and reinforcement learning. This role has high visibility to senior Amazon business leaders and involves working with other scientists, and partnering with engineering and product teams to integrate scientific work into production systems. Key job responsibilities - As a senior member of the science team, you will play an integral part in building Amazon's FBA management system. - Research and develop machine learning models to solve diverse business problems faced in Seller inventory management systems. - Define a long-term science vision and roadmap for the team, driven fundamentally from our customers' needs, translating those directions into specific plans for research and applied scientists, as well as engineering and product teams. - Drive and execute machine learning projects/products end-to-end: from ideation, analysis, prototyping, development, metrics, and monitoring. - Review and audit modeling processes and results for other scientists, both junior and senior. - Advocate the right ML solutions to business stakeholders, engineering teams, as well as executive level decision makers A day in the life In this role, you will be a technical leader in machine learning with significant scope, impact, and high visibility. Your solutions may lead to billions of dollars impact on either the topline or the bottom line of Amazon third-party seller business. As a senior scientist on the team, you will be involved in every aspect of the process - from idea generation, business analysis and scientific research, through to development and deployment of advanced models - giving you a real sense of ownership. From day one, you will be working with experienced scientists, engineers, and designers who love what they do. You are expected to make decisions about technology, models and methodology choices. You will strive for simplicity, and demonstrate judgment backed by mathematical proof. You will also collaborate with the broader decision and research science community in Amazon to broaden the horizon of your work and mentor engineers and scientists. The successful candidate will have the strong expertise in applying machine learning models in an applied environment and is looking for her/his next opportunity to innovate, build, deliver, and impress. We are seeking someone who wants to lead projects that require innovative thinking and deep technical problem-solving skills to create production-ready machine learning solutions. The candidate will need to be entrepreneurial, wear many hats, and work in a fast-paced, high-energy, highly collaborative environment. We value highly technical people who know their subject matter deeply and are willing to learn new areas. We look for individuals who know how to deliver results and show a desire to develop themselves, their colleagues, and their career. About the team Fulfillment by Amazon (FBA) is a service that allows sellers to outsource order fulfillment to Amazon, allowing sellers to leverage Amazon’s world-class facilities to provide customers Prime delivery promise. Sellers gain access to Prime members worldwide, see their sales lift, and are free to focus their time and resources on what they do best while Amazon manages fulfillment. Over the last several years, sellers have enjoyed strong business growth with FBA shipping more than half of all products offered by Amazon. FBA focuses on helping sellers with automating and optimizing the third-party supply chain. FBA sellers leverage Amazon’s expertise in machine learning, optimization, data analytics, econometrics, and market design to deliver the best inventory management experience to sellers. We work full-stack, from foundational backend systems to future-forward user interfaces. Our culture is centered on rapid prototyping, rigorous experimentation, and data-driven decision-making. We are open to hiring candidates to work out of one of the following locations: Bellevue, WA, USA
US, WA, Bellevue
The Fulfillment by Amazon (FBA) team is looking for a passionate, curious, and creative Applied Scientist, with expertise and experience in machine learning, to join our top-notch cross-domain FBA science team. We want to learn seller behaviors, understand seller experience, build automated LLM-based solutions to sellers, design seller policies and incentives, and develop science products and services that empower third-party sellers to grow their businesses. We also predict potentially costly defects that may occur during packing, shipping, receiving and storing the inventory. We aim to prevent such defects before occurring while we are also fulfilling customer demand as quickly and efficiently as possible, in addition to managing returns and reimbursements. To do so, we build and innovate science solutions at the intersection of machine learning, statistics, economics, operations research, and data analytics. As an applied scientist, you will design and implement ML solutions that will likely draw from a range of scientific areas such as supervised and unsupervised learning, recommendation systems, statistical learning, LLMs, and reinforcement learning. This role has high visibility to senior Amazon business leaders and involves working with other senior and principal scientists, and partnering with engineering and product teams to integrate scientific work into production systems. Key job responsibilities - Research and develop machine learning models to solve diverse FBA business problems. - Translate business requirements/problems into specific plans for research and applied scientists, as well as engineering and product teams. - Drive and execute machine learning projects/products end-to-end: from ideation, analysis, prototyping, development, metrics, and monitoring. - Work closely with teams of scientists, product managers, program managers, software engineers to drive production model implementations. - Build scalable, efficient, automated processes for large scale data analyses, model development, model validation and model implementation. - Advocate technical solutions to business stakeholders, engineering teams, as well as executive level decision makers A day in the life In this role, you will work in machine learning with significant scope, impact, and high visibility. Your solutions may lead to billions of dollars impact on either the topline or the bottom line of Amazon third-party seller business. As an applied scientist, you will be involved in every aspect of the scientific development process - from idea generation, business analysis and scientific research, through to development and deployment of advanced models - giving you a real sense of ownership. From day one, you will be working with experienced scientists, engineers, and designers who love what they do. You are expected to make decisions about technology, models and methodology choices. You will strive for simplicity, and demonstrate judgment backed by mathematical proof. You will also collaborate with the broader decision and research science community in Amazon to broaden the horizon of your work and mentor engineers and scientists. The successful candidate will have the strong expertise in applying machine learning models in an applied environment and is looking for her/his next opportunity to innovate, build, deliver, and impress. We are seeking someone who wants to lead projects that require innovative thinking and deep technical problem-solving skills to create production-ready machine learning solutions. We value highly technical people who know their subject matter deeply and are willing to learn new areas. We look for individuals who know how to deliver results and show a desire to develop themselves, their colleagues, and their career. About the team Fulfillment by Amazon (FBA) is a service that allows sellers to outsource order fulfillment to Amazon, allowing sellers to leverage Amazon’s world-class facilities to provide customers Prime delivery promise. Sellers gain access to Prime members worldwide, see their sales lift, and are free to focus their time and resources on what they do best while Amazon manages fulfillment. Over the last several years, sellers have enjoyed strong business growth with FBA shipping more than half of all products offered by Amazon. FBA focuses on helping sellers with automating and optimizing the third-party supply chain. FBA sellers leverage Amazon’s expertise in machine learning, optimization, data analytics, econometrics, and market design to deliver the best inventory management experience to sellers. We work full-stack, from foundational backend systems to future-forward user interfaces. Our culture is centered on rapid prototyping, rigorous experimentation, and data-driven decision-making. We are open to hiring candidates to work out of one of the following locations: Bellevue, WA, USA
US, WA, Seattle
Outbound Communications own the worldwide charter for delighting our customers with timely, relevant notifications (email, mobile, SMS and other channels) to drive awareness and discovery of Amazon’s products and services. We meet customers at their channel of preference with the most relevant content at the right time and frequency. We directly create and operate marketing campaigns, and we have also enabled select partner teams to build programs by reusing and extending our infrastructure. We optimize for customers to receive the most relevant and engaging content across all of Amazon worldwide, and apply the appropriate guardrails to ensure a consistent and high-quality CX. Outbound Communications seek a talented Applied Scientist to join our team to develop the next generation of automated and personalized marketing programs to help Amazon customers in their shopping journeys worldwide. Come join us in our mission today! Key job responsibilities As an Applied Scientist on the team, you will lead the roadmap and strategy for applying science to solve customer problems in the automated marketing domain. This is an opportunity to come in on Day 0 and lead the science strategy of one of the most interesting problem spaces at Amazon - understanding the Amazon customer to build deeply personalized and adaptive messaging experiences. You will be part of a multidisciplinary team and play an active role in translating business and functional requirements into concrete deliverables. You will work closely with product management and the software development team to put solutions into production. You will apply your skills in areas such as deep learning and reinforcement learning while building scalable industrial systems. You will have a unique opportunity to produce and deliver models that help build best-in-class customer experiences and build systems that allow us to deploy these models to production with low latency and high throughput. We are open to hiring candidates to work out of one of the following locations: Seattle, WA, USA
US, WA, Seattle
The Artificial General Intelligence (AGI) team is looking for a passionate, talented, and inventive Applied Scientist with a strong deep learning background, to help build industry-leading technology with multimodal systems. Key job responsibilities As an Applied Scientist with the AGI team, you will work with talented peers to develop novel algorithms and modeling techniques to advance the state of the art with multimodal systems. Your work will directly impact our customers in the form of products and services that make use of vision and language technology. You will leverage Amazon’s heterogeneous data sources and large-scale computing resources to accelerate development with multimodal Large Language Models (LLMs) and Generative Artificial Intelligence (Gen AI) in Computer Vision. About the team The AGI team has a mission to push the envelope with multimodal LLMs and Gen AI in Computer Vision, in order to provide the best-possible experience for our customers. We are open to hiring candidates to work out of one of the following locations: Seattle, WA, USA
US, WA, Bellevue
We are looking for a passionate, talented, and resourceful Applied Scientist with background in Natural Language Processing (NLP), Reinforcement Learning, or Recommender Systems to invent and build scalable solutions for a state-of-the-art conversational assistant. The ideal candidate should have a robust foundation in machine learning and a keen interest in advancing the field. The ideal candidate would also enjoy operating in dynamic environments, have the self-motivation to take on challenging problems to deliver big customer impact, and move fast to ship solutions and then iterate on user feedback and interactions. About the team The Artificial General Intelligence (AGI) team is looking for a passionate, talented, and inventive Applied Scientist to help build industry-leading conversational technologies that customers love. Our mission is to push the envelope in Artificial Intelligence (AI), Natural Language Understanding (NLU), Machine Learning (ML), Dialog Management, Automatic Speech Recognition (ASR), and Audio Signal Processing, in order to provide the best-possible experience for our customers We are open to hiring candidates to work out of one of the following locations: Bellevue, WA, USA | Boston, MA, USA | Seattle, WA, USA | Sunnyvale, CA, USA
CN, 11, Beijing
Amazon Search JP builds features powering product search on the Amazon JP shopping site and expands the innovations to world wide. As an Applied Scientist on this growing team, you will take on a key role in improving the NLP and ranking capabilities of the Amazon product search service. Our ultimate goal is to help customers find the products they are searching for, and discover new products they would be interested in. We do so by developing NLP components that cover a wide range of languages and systems. As an Applied Scientist for Search JP, you will design, implement and deliver search features on Amazon site, helping millions of customers every day to find quickly what they are looking for. You will propose innovation in NLP and IR to build ML models trained on terabytes of product and traffic data, which are evaluated using both offline metrics as well as online metrics from A/B testing. You will then integrate these models into the production search engine that serves customers, closing the loop through data, modeling, application, and customer feedback. The chosen approaches for model architecture will balance business-defined performance metrics with the needs of millisecond response times. Key job responsibilities - Designing and implementing new features and machine learned models, including the application of state-of-art deep learning to solve search matching, ranking and Search suggestion problems. - Analyzing data and metrics relevant to the search experiences. - Working with teams worldwide on global projects. Your benefits include: - Working on a high-impact, high-visibility product, with your work improving the experience of millions of customers - The opportunity to use (and innovate) state-of-the-art ML methods to solve real-world problems with tangible customer impact - Being part of a growing team where you can influence the team's mission, direction, and how we achieve our goals We are open to hiring candidates to work out of one of the following locations: Beijing, 11, CHN | Shanghai, 31, CHN
US, WA, Seattle
The Automated Reasoning Group in AWS Platform is looking for an Applied Scientist with experience in building scalable solver solutions that delight customers. You will be part of a world-class team building the next generation of automated reasoning tools and services. AWS has the most services and more features within those services, than any other cloud provider–from infrastructure technologies like compute, storage, and databases–to emerging technologies, such as machine learning and artificial intelligence, data lakes and analytics, and Internet of Things. You will apply your knowledge to propose solutions, create software prototypes, and move prototypes into production systems using modern software development tools and methodologies. In addition, you will support and scale your solutions to meet the ever-growing demand of customer use. You will use your strong verbal and written communication skills, are self-driven and own the delivery of high quality results in a fast-paced environment. Each day, hundreds of thousands of developers make billions of transactions worldwide on AWS. They harness the power of the cloud to enable innovative applications, websites, and businesses. Using automated reasoning technology and mathematical proofs, AWS allows customers to answer questions about security, availability, durability, and functional correctness. We call this provable security, absolute assurance in security of the cloud and in the cloud. See https://aws.amazon.com/security/provable-security/ As an Applied Scientist in AWS Platform, you will play a pivotal role in shaping the definition, vision, design, roadmap and development of product features from beginning to end. You will: - Define and implement new solver applications that are scalable and efficient approaches to difficult problems - Apply software engineering best practices to ensure a high standard of quality for all team deliverables - Work in an agile, startup-like development environment, where you are always working on the most important stuff - Deliver high-quality scientific artifacts - Work with the team to define new interfaces that lower the barrier of adoption for automated reasoning solvers - Work with the team to help drive business decisions The AWS Platform is the glue that holds the AWS ecosystem together. From identity features such as access management and sign on, cryptography, console, builder & developer tools, to projects like automating all of our contractual billing systems, AWS Platform is always innovating with the customer in mind. The AWS Platform team sustains over 750 million transactions per second. Learn and Be Curious. We have a formal mentor search application that lets you find a mentor that works best for you based on location, job family, job level etc. Your manager can also help you find a mentor or two, because two is better than one. In addition to formal mentors, we work and train together so that we are always learning from one another, and we celebrate and support the career progression of our team members. Inclusion and Diversity. Our team is diverse! We drive towards an inclusive culture and work environment. We are intentional about attracting, developing, and retaining amazing talent from diverse backgrounds. Team members are active in Amazon’s 10+ affinity groups, sometimes known as employee resource groups, which bring employees together across businesses and locations around the world. These range from groups such as the Black Employee Network, Latinos at Amazon, Indigenous at Amazon, Families at Amazon, Amazon Women and Engineering, LGBTQ+, Warriors at Amazon (Military), Amazon People With Disabilities, and more. Key job responsibilities Work closely with internal and external users on defining and extending application domains. Tune solver performance for application-specific demands. Identify new opportunities for solver deployment. About the team Solver science is a talented team of scientists from around the world. Expertise areas include solver theory, performance, implementation, and applications. Diverse Experiences AWS values diverse experiences. Even if you do not meet all of the qualifications and skills listed in the job description, we encourage candidates to apply. If your career is just starting, hasn’t followed a traditional path, or includes alternative experiences, don’t let it stop you from applying. Why AWS? Amazon Web Services (AWS) is the world’s most comprehensive and broadly adopted cloud platform. We pioneered cloud computing and never stopped innovating — that’s why customers from the most successful startups to Global 500 companies trust our robust suite of products and services to power their businesses. Inclusive Team Culture Here at AWS, it’s in our nature to learn and be curious. Our employee-led affinity groups foster a culture of inclusion that empower us to be proud of our differences. Ongoing events and learning experiences, including our Conversations on Race and Ethnicity (CORE) and AmazeCon (gender diversity) conferences, inspire us to never stop embracing our uniqueness. Mentorship & Career Growth We’re continuously raising our performance bar as we strive to become Earth’s Best Employer. That’s why you’ll find endless knowledge-sharing, mentorship and other career-advancing resources here to help you develop into a better-rounded professional. Work/Life Balance We value work-life harmony. Achieving success at work should never come at the expense of sacrifices at home, which is why we strive for flexibility as part of our working culture. When we feel supported in the workplace and at home, there’s nothing we can’t achieve in the cloud. Hybrid Work We value innovation and recognize this sometimes requires uninterrupted time to focus on a build. We also value in-person collaboration and time spent face-to-face. Our team affords employees options to work in the office every day or in a flexible, hybrid work model near one of our U.S. Amazon offices. We are open to hiring candidates to work out of one of the following locations: Portland, OR, USA | Seattle, WA, USA