Jeff Wilke, who was then Amazon's consumer worldwide CEO, delivering a keynote presentation at re:MARS 2019
Jeff Wilke, who was then Amazon's consumer worldwide CEO, delivering a keynote presentation at re:MARS 2019

The history of Amazon's recommendation algorithm

Collaborative filtering and beyond.

In 2017, when the journal IEEE Internet Computing was celebrating its 20th anniversary, its editorial board decided to identify the single paper from its publication history that had best withstood the “test of time”. The honor went to a 2003 paper called “Amazon.com Recommendations: Item-to-Item Collaborative Filtering”, by then Amazon researchers Greg Linden, Brent Smith, and Jeremy York.

Collaborative filtering is the most common way to do product recommendation online. It’s “collaborative” because it predicts a given customer’s preferences on the basis of other customers’.

“There was already a lot of interest and work in it,” says Smith, now the leader of Amazon’s Weblab, which does A/B testing (structured testing of variant offerings) at scale to enable data-driven business decisions. “The world was focused on user-based collaborative filtering. A user comes to the website: What other users are like them? We sort of turned it on its head and found a different way of doing it that had a lot better scaling and quality characteristics for online recommendations.”

Related content
The story of a decade-plus long journey toward a unified forecasting model.

The better way was to base product recommendations not on similarities between customers but on correlations between products. With user-based collaborative filtering, a visitor to Amazon.com would be matched with other customers who had similar purchase histories, and those purchase histories would suggest recommendations for the visitor.

With item-to-item collaborative filtering, on the other hand, the recommendation algorithm would review the visitor’s recent purchase history and, for each purchase, pull up a list of related items. Items that showed up repeatedly across all the lists were candidates for recommendation to the visitor. But those candidates were given greater or lesser weight depending on how related they were to the visitor's prior purchases.

Related content
How Amazon’s scientists developed a first-of-its-kind multi-echelon system for inventory buying and placement.

That notion of relatedness is still derived from customers’ purchase histories: item B is related to item A if customers who buy A are unusually likely to buy B as well. But Amazon’s Personalization team found, empirically, that analyzing purchase histories at the item level yielded better recommendations than analyzing them at the customer level.

Family ties

Beyond improving recommendations, item-to-item collaborative filtering also offered significant computational advantages. Finding the group of customers whose purchase histories most closely resemble a given visitor’s would require comparing purchase histories across Amazon’s entire customer database. That would be prohibitively time consuming during a single site visit.

The history of Amazon's recommendation algorithm | Amazon Science

The alternatives are either to randomly sample other customers in real time and settle for the best matches found or to build a huge offline similarity index by comparing every customer to every other. Because Amazon customers’ purchase histories can change dramatically in the course of a single day, that index would have to be updated regularly. Even offline indexing presents a huge computational burden.

On average, however, a given product sold on the Amazom Store purchased by only a tiny subset of the site’s customers. That means that inspecting the recent-purchase histories of everyone who bought a given item requires far fewer lookups than identifying the customers who most resemble a given site visitor. Smith and his colleagues found that even with early-2000s technology, it was computationally feasible to produce an updated list of related items for every product on the Amazon site on a daily basis.

Related content
Dual embeddings of each node, as both source and target, and a novel loss function enable 30% to 160% improvements over predecessors.

The crucial question: how to measure relatedness. Simply counting how often purchasers of item A also bought item B wouldn’t do; that would make a few bestsellers like Harry Potter books and trash bags the top recommendations for every customer on every purchase.

Instead, the Amazon researchers used a relatedness metric based on differential probabilities: item B is related to item A if purchasers of A are more likely to buy B than the average Amazon customer is. The greater the difference in probability, the greater the items’ relatedness.

When Linden, Smith, and York published their paper in IEEE Internet Computing, their item-based recommendation algorithm had already been in use for six years. But it took several more years to identify and correct a fundamental flaw in the relatedness measure.

Getting the math right

The problem: the algorithm was systematically underestimating the baseline likelihood that someone who bought A would also buy B. Since a customer who buys a lot of products is more likely to buy A than a customer who buys few products, A buyers are, on average, heavier buyers than the typical Amazon customer. But because they’re heavy buyers, they’re also unusually likely to buy B.

Smith and his colleagues realized that it wasn’t enough to assess the increased likelihood of buying product B given the purchase of product A; they had to assess the increased likelihood of buying product B with any given purchase. That is, they discounted heavy buyers’ increased likelihood of buying B according to the heaviness of their buying.

“That was a large improvement to recommendations quality, when we got the math right,” Smith says.

Related content
Danielle Maddix Robinson's mathematics background helps inform robust models that can predict everything from retail demand to epidemiology.

That was more than a decade ago. Since then, Amazon researchers have been investigating a wide variety of ways to make customer recommendations more useful: moving beyond collaborative filtering to factor in personal preferences such as brands or fashion styles; learning to time recommendations (you may want to order more diapers!); and learning to target recommendations to different users of the same account, among many other things.

In June 2019, during a keynote address at Amazon’s first re:MARS conference, Jeff Wilke, then the CEO of Amazon’s consumer division, highlighted one particular advance, in the algorithm for recommending movies to Amazon’s Prime Video customers. Amazon researchers’ innovations led to a twofold improvement in that algorithm’s performance, which Wilke described as a “once-in-a-decade leap”.

Entering the matrix

Recommendation is often modeled as a matrix completion problem. Imagine a huge grid, whose rows represent Prime Video customers and whose columns represent the movies in the Prime Video catalogue. If a customer has seen a particular movie, the corresponding cell in the grid contains a one; if not, it’s blank. The goal of matrix completion is to fill in the grid with the probabilities that any given customer will watch any given movie.

In 2014, Vijai Mohan’s team in the Personalization group — Avishkar Misra, Jane You, Rejith Joseph, Scott Le Grand, and Eric Nalisnick — was asked to design a new recommendation algorithm for Prime Video. At the time, the standard technique for generating personalized recommendations was matrix factorization, which identifies relatively small matrices that, multiplied together, will approximate a much larger matrix.

Related content
The switch to WebAssembly increases stability, speed.

Inspired by work done by Ruslan Salakhutdinov — then an assistant professor of computer science at the University of Toronto — Mohan’s team instead decided to apply deep neural networks to the problem of matrix completion.

The typical deep neural network contains thousands or even millions of simple processing nodes, arranged into layers. Data is fed into the nodes of the bottom layer, which process it and pass their results to the next layer, and so on; the output of the top layer represents the result of some computation.

Training the network consists of feeding it lots of sample inputs and outputs. During training, the network’s settings are constantly adjusted, until they minimize the average discrepancy between the top layer’s output and the target outputs in the training examples.

Reconstruction

Matrix completion methods commonly use a type of neural network called an autoencoder. The autoencoder is trained simply to output the same data it takes as input. But in-between the input and output layers is a bottleneck, a layer with relatively few nodes — in this case, only 100, versus tens of thousands of input and output nodes.

We had to go and doublecheck and re-run the experiments multiple times, I was giving a hard time to the scientists. I was saying, ‘You probably made a mistake.’
Vijai Mohan

As a consequence, the network can’t just copy inputs directly to outputs; it must learn a general procedure for compressing and then re-expanding every example in the training set. The re-expansion will be imperfect: in the movie recommendation setting, the network will guess that customers have seen movies they haven’t. But when, for a given customer-movie pair, it guesses wrong with high confidence, that’s a good sign that the customer would be interested in that movie.

To benchmark the autoencoder’s performance, the researchers compared it to two baseline systems. One was the latest version of Smith and his colleagues’ collaborative-filtering algorithm. The other was a simple listing of the most popular movie rentals of the previous two weeks. “In the recommendations world, there’s a cardinal rule,” Mohan says. “If I know nothing about you, then the best things to recommend to you are the most popular things in the world.”

To their mild surprise, the item-to-item collaborative-filtering algorithm outperformed the autoencoder. But to their much greater surprise, so did the simple bestseller list. The autoencoder’s performance was “so bad that we had to go and doublecheck and re-run the experiments multiple times,” Mohan says. “I was giving a hard time to the scientists. I was saying, ‘You probably made a mistake.’”

Once they were sure the results were valid, however, they were quick to see why. In a vacuum, matrix completion may give the best overview of a particular customer’s tastes. But at any given time, most movie watchers will probably opt for recent releases over neglected classics in their preferred genres.

Neural network classifiers with time considerations
Amazon researchers found that using neural networks to generate movie recommendations worked much better when they sorted the input data chronologically and used it to predict future movie preferences over a short (one- to two-week) period.

So Mohan’s team re-framed the problem. They still used an autoencoder, but they trained it on movie-viewing data that had been sorted chronologically. During training, the autoencoder saw data on movies that customers had watched before some cutoff time. But it was evaluated on how well it predicted the movies they had watched in the two-week period after the cutoff time.

Because Prime Video’s Web interface displays six movie recommendations on the page associated with each title in its catalogue, the researchers evaluated their system on whether at least one of its top six recommendations for a given customer was in fact a movie that that customer watched in the two-week period after the cutoff date. By that measure, not only did the autoencoder outperform the bestseller list, but it also outperformed item-to-item collaborative filtering, two to one. As Wilke put it at re:MARS, “We had a winner.”

Whether any of the work that Amazon researchers are doing now will win test-of-time awards two decades hence remains to be seen. But Smith, Mohan, and their colleagues will continue to pursue new approaches to designing recommendation algorithms, in the hope of making Amazon.com that much more useful for customers.

Related content

US, WA, Seattle
We are working on improving shopping on Amazon using the conversational capabilities of large language models and through customer behavioral data to make them more personalized for each customer. We are searching for pioneers who are passionate about technology, innovation, and customer experience, and are ready to make a lasting impact on the industry. In this role, you will be managing a team working on Large Language Model (LLM) and/or Vision-Language Model (VLM) post-training and alignment for new shopping experiences. You’ll be working with talented scientists, engineers, and technical program managers (TPM) to innovate on behalf of our customers. If you’re fired up about being part of a dynamic, driven team, then this is your moment to join us on this exciting journey!
US, CA, San Francisco
AWS is one of Amazon’s largest and fastest growing businesses, serving millions of customers in more than 190 countries. We use cloud computing to reshape the way global enterprises use information technology. We are looking for entrepreneurial, analytical, creative, flexible leaders to help us redefine the information technology industry. If you want to join a fast-paced, innovative team that is making history, this is the place for you. AWS Central Economics & Science (ACES) drives best practices for objectively applying economics and science in decision making across AWS. The team collaborates with AWS science and business teams to identify, frame, and analyze complex and ambiguous problems of the highest priority. Through data-driven insights and modeling, ACES supports strategic decision-making across the AWS global organization, including sales operations and business performance optimization. The ACES Sales Channels team is hiring an Applied Scientist (Senior or below) to advance our mission of providing rigorous, causal-inference-driven recommendations for AWS sales optimization. This role will focus on building ML systems with a causal modeling foundation, designing seller incentive mechanisms, and developing intervention strategies across the entire sales motion. Key job responsibilities • Causal ML System Development: Build and deploy machine learning models that emphasize causal inference, ensuring recommendations are grounded in valid interventions • Incentive Design: Define and model incentives that drive desirable behaviors across AWS sales channels, partner programs, and reseller ecosystems • Stakeholder Collaboration: Work with business stakeholders to understand requirements, validate approaches, and ensure practical applicability of scientific solutions • Scientific Rigor: Promote findings at internal conferences and contribute to the team's reputation for methodological excellence A day in the life The ACES Sales Channels team works on understanding and optimizing AWS's sales channels, both direct (generalist and specialist sellers) and indirect (partners and Marketplace). Our work falls into three core areas: developing rigorous causal measurement and modeling frameworks using frontier economics and statistical methods; designing programs and incentives to improve customer and business outcomes; and building ML-based recommendation systems for sellers, partners, and other AWS stakeholders. About the team 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 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.
US, WA, Seattle
Stores Economics and Science (SEAS) is an interdisciplinary science and engineering team in Amazon's Stores organization with a peak-jumping mission: we apply expertise in science and engineering to move from local to global optima in methods, models, and software. We pursue this mission by leveraging frontier science; collaborating with partner teams; and learning from the tools, experience, and perspective of others. We scale by solving problems, first in the small to prove concepts, and then in the large by building scalable solutions. We also help other teams within Amazon scale by hiring and developing the best and embedding them in other business units. In 2026, we are focused on economics and science in areas related to (1) lowering cost-to-serve, (2) optimizing selection, and (3) emerging machine learning. We also have some ongoing and highly-leveraged collaborations that help partner teams inside Amazon short-circuit months of R&D or otherwise look around corners. We are looking for an Applied Scientist to build and deliver state-of-the-art science and engineering solutions to improve our Stores business. In this role, you will work in a team of scientists and engineers with backgrounds in machine learning, NLP, IR, statistics, and economics to identify bottlenecks in our business, conceive new ideas to overcome those challenges, and deploy scientific solutions in partnership with product teams. Your responsibilities include developing and maintaining the scientific models, benchmarks, and services. Graduate education or hands-on experience in machine learning, optimization, causal inference, Bayesian statistics, deep learning, or other quantitative scientific fields is a big plus. To be successful in this role, you should be a quick learner and comfortable with a high degree of ambiguity. Key job responsibilities The successful candidate will lead large-scale science initiatives from research to production and translate complex business problems into mathematical frameworks. They will design and implement large-scale algorithms for complex supply chain and marketplace problems, and design incentive-compatible mechanisms for marketplace challenges. The ideal candidate will have a strong publication record in top-tier conferences/journals (INFORMS, EC, WINE, ICML, NeurIPS, etc.) and experience coordinating cross-functional projects. Hands-on experience building science solutions to mechanism design problems (e.g., optimal auction design, welfare maximization under constraints, incentive compatible coordination), with expertise in statistical learning and algorithm development. Leadership responsibilities include influencing technical strategy and roadmaps for complex initiatives, influencing senior stakeholders and shaping technical direction, and fostering team growth.
US, NY, New York
We are seeking an Applied Scientist to lead the development of evaluation frameworks and data collection protocols for robotic capabilities. In this role, you will focus on designing how we measure, stress-test, and improve robot behavior across a wide range of real-world tasks. Your work will play a critical role in shaping how policies are validated and how high-quality datasets are generated to accelerate system performance. You will operate at the intersection of robotics, machine learning, and human-in-the-loop systems, building the infrastructure and methodologies that connect teleoperation, evaluation, and learning. This includes developing evaluation policies, defining task structures, and contributing to operator-facing interfaces that enable scalable and reliable data collection. The ideal candidate is highly experimental, systems-oriented, and comfortable working across software, robotics, and data pipelines, with a strong focus on turning ambiguous capability goals into measurable and actionable evaluation systems. Key job responsibilities - Design and implement evaluation frameworks to measure robot capabilities across structured tasks, edge cases, and real-world scenarios - Develop task definitions, success criteria, and benchmarking methodologies that enable consistent and reproducible evaluation of policies - Create and refine data collection protocols that generate high-quality, task-relevant datasets aligned with model development needs - Build and iterate on teleoperation workflows and operator interfaces to support efficient, reliable, and scalable data collection - Analyze evaluation results and collected data to identify performance gaps, failure modes, and opportunities for targeted data collection - Collaborate with engineering teams to integrate evaluation tooling, logging systems, and data pipelines into the broader robotics stack - Stay current with advances in robotics, evaluation methodologies, and human-in-the-loop learning to continuously improve internal approaches - Lead technical projects from conception through production deployment - Mentor junior scientists and engineers
US, WA, Seattle
Prime Video is a first-stop entertainment destination offering customers a vast collection of premium programming in one app available across thousands of devices. Prime members can customize their viewing experience and find their favorite movies, series, documentaries, and live sports – including Amazon MGM Studios-produced series and movies; licensed fan favorites; and programming from Prime Video subscriptions such as Apple TV+, HBO Max, Peacock, Crunchyroll and MGM+. All customers, regardless of whether they have a Prime membership or not, can rent or buy titles via the Prime Video Store, and can enjoy even more content for free with ads. Are you interested in shaping the future of entertainment? Prime Video's technology teams are creating best-in-class digital video experience. As a Prime Video team member, you’ll have end-to-end ownership of the product, user experience, design, and technology required to deliver state-of-the-art experiences for our customers. You’ll get to work on projects that are fast-paced, challenging, and varied. You’ll also be able to experiment with new possibilities, take risks, and collaborate with remarkable people. We’ll look for you to bring your diverse perspectives, ideas, and skill-sets to make Prime Video even better for our customers. With global opportunities for talented technologists, you can decide where a career Prime Video Tech takes you! As an Applied Scientist, you will apply state of the art natural language processing and computer vision research to video centric digital media. We are looking for scientists with expertise in vision-language models/multimodal LLMs and long-form content understanding (full movies/episode vs. short clips). You will be dealing with architectures that handle long-context understanding and causal reasoning across extended temporal sequences. Key job responsibilities Our team builds multi-modal machine learning technologies to enrich and understand video content. We aim not only to understand individual components within the content itself, but also their relationships to each other to provide a holistic and broader contextual understanding. This powers the next generation of video understanding and search capabilities for Prime Video. About the team Prime Video's Content Localization, Understanding & Enrichment organization is responsible for 1) enabling Prime Video to "see" and "understand" video content including characters, scenes, dialogue, events & visual elements and 2) delivering localized, accessible content that meets a consistent cinematic quality standard at scale. This team's mission is to deeply understand all content and empower all customers with relevant language options, innovative accessibility assists, and rich title-information across all their content-experiences on Prime Video. We create and publish content on-time that's meaningful, accurate, and accessible to every customer globally. We delight our customers by pushing the boundaries of content understanding and enrichment. Through inclusion and innovation, we do the most fulfilling work of our career.
US, NY, New York
The Sponsored Products and Brands team at Amazon Ads is re-imagining the advertising landscape through cutting-edge generative AI technologies, revolutionizing how millions of customers discover products and engage with brands across Amazon.com and beyond. We are at the forefront of re-inventing advertising experiences, bridging human creativity with artificial intelligence to transform every aspect of the advertising lifecycle from ad creation and optimization to performance analysis and customer insights. We are a passionate group of innovators dedicated to developing responsible and intelligent AI technologies that balance the needs of advertisers, enhance the shopping experience, and strengthen the marketplace. If you're energized by solving complex challenges and pushing the boundaries of what's possible with AI, join us in shaping the future of advertising. Key job responsibilities Participate in the Science hiring process as well as mentor other scientists - improving their skills, their knowledge of your solutions, and their ability to get things done. Identify and devise new video related solutions following a customer-obsessed scientific approach to address customer or business problems when the problem is ill-defined, needs to be framed, and new methodologies or paradigms need to be invented at the product level. Articulate potential scientific challenges of ongoing or future customers’ needs or business problems, and present interventions to address them. Independently assess alternative video related technologies, driving evaluation and adoption of those that fit best A day in the life As an Applied Scientist on the Sponsored Brands Video team, you will work with a team of talented and experienced engineers, scientists, and designers to help bring new products to market and ensure that our customers are delighted by what we create. The Sponsored Brands Video team is responsible for the design, development, and implementation of Sponsored Brands Video experiences worldwide. About the team The Sponsored Brands Video team within Sponsored Products and Brands creates relevant and engaging video experiences, connecting advertisers and shoppers. We are on a mission to make Amazon the best in class destination for shoppers to discover, engage and build affinity with brands, making shopping delightful, & personal.
US, CA, San Francisco
Employer: Amazon Web Services, Inc. Position: Data Scientist II - AMZ27351.1 Location: San Francisco, CA Multiple Positions Available: Design and implement scalable and reliable approaches to support or automate decision making throughout the business. Apply a range of data science techniques and tools combined with subject matter expertise to solve difficult business problems and cases in which the solution approach is unclear. Acquire data by building the necessary SQL / ETL queries. Import processes through various company specific interfaces for accessing Oracle, RedShift, and Spark storage systems. Build relationships with stakeholders and counterparts. Analyze data for trends and input validity by inspecting univariate distributions, exploring bivariate relationships, constructing appropriate transformations, and tracking down the source and meaning of anomalies. Build models using statistical modeling, mathematical modeling, econometric modeling, network modeling, social network modeling, natural language processing, machine learning algorithms, genetic algorithms, and neural networks. Validate models against alternative approaches, expected and observed outcome, and other business defined key performance indicators. Implement models that comply with evaluations of the computational demands, accuracy, and reliability of the relevant ETL processes at various stages of production. (40 hours / week, 8:00am-5:00pm, Salary Range $175425 - $212800) Amazon.com is an Equal Opportunity – Affirmative Action Employer – Minority / Female / Disability / Veteran / Gender Identity / Sexual Orientation
US, CA, San Francisco
Join the next revolution in robotics at Amazon's Frontier AI & Robotics team, where you'll work alongside world-renowned AI pioneers to lead key initiatives in robotic intelligence. As a Member of Technical Staff, you'll spearhead the development of breakthrough foundation models that enable robots to perceive, understand, and interact with the world in unprecedented ways. You'll drive technical excellence in areas such as perception, manipulation, science understanding, sim2real transfer, multi-modal foundation models, and multi-task learning, designing novel algorithms that bridge the gap between state-of-the-art research and real-world deployment at Amazon scale. In this role, you'll combine hands-on technical work with scientific leadership, ensuring your team delivers robust solutions for dynamic real-world environments. You'll leverage Amazon's vast computational resources to tackle ambitious problems in areas like very large multi-modal robotic foundation models and efficient, promptable model architectures that can scale across diverse robotic applications. Key job responsibilities - Lead technical initiatives in robotics foundation models, driving breakthrough approaches through hands-on research and development in areas like open-vocabulary panoptic scene understanding, scaling up multi-modal LLMs, sim2real/real2sim techniques, end-to-end vision-language-action models, efficient model inference, video tokenization - Design and implement novel deep learning architectures that push the boundaries of what robots can understand and accomplish - Guide technical direction for specific research initiatives, ensuring robust performance in production environments - Mentor and support fellow scientists while maintaining strong individual technical contributions - Collaborate with engineering teams to optimize and scale models for real-world applications - Influence technical decisions and implementation strategies within your area of focus A day in the life - Develop and implement novel foundation model architectures, working hands-on with our extensive compute infrastructure - Guide and support fellow scientists in solving complex technical challenges, from sim2real transfer to efficient multi-task learning - Lead focused technical initiatives from conception through deployment, ensuring successful integration with production systems - Drive technical discussions within your team and with key stakeholders - Conduct experiments and prototype new ideas using our massive compute cluster - Mentor team members while maintaining significant hands-on contribution to technical solutions Amazon offers a full range of benefits that support you and eligible family members, including domestic partners and their children. Benefits can vary by location, the number of regularly scheduled hours you work, length of employment, and job status such as seasonal or temporary employment. The benefits that generally apply to regular, full-time employees include: 1. Medical, Dental, and Vision Coverage 2. Maternity and Parental Leave Options 3. Paid Time Off (PTO) 4. 401(k) Plan If you are not sure that every qualification on the list above describes you exactly, we'd still love to hear from you! At Amazon, we value people with unique backgrounds, experiences, and skillsets. If you’re passionate about this role and want to make an impact on a global scale, please apply! About the team At Frontier AI & Robotics, we're not just advancing robotics – we're reimagining it from the ground up. Our team is building the future of intelligent robotics through ground breaking foundation models and end-to-end learned systems. We tackle some of the most challenging problems in AI and robotics, from developing sophisticated perception systems to creating adaptive manipulation strategies that work in complex, real-world scenarios. What sets us apart is our unique combination of ambitious research vision and practical impact. We leverage Amazon's massive computational infrastructure and rich real-world datasets to train and deploy state-of-the-art foundation models. Our work spans the full spectrum of robotics intelligence – from multimodal perception using images, videos, and sensor data, to sophisticated manipulation strategies that can handle diverse real-world scenarios. We're building systems that don't just work in the lab, but scale to meet the demands of Amazon's global operations. Join us if you're excited about pushing the boundaries of what's possible in robotics, working with world-class researchers, and seeing your innovations deployed at unprecedented scale.
GB, London
The Agentic Automated Reasoning Group is building the next generation of software verification tools combining advances in artificial intelligence, the computational capacity of the cloud, and our deep expertise in the domain. Join us if you want to be a part of this transformational endeavor. The Strata team (https://github.com/strata-org) is seeking an applied scientist with broad interest and expertise in model checking, interactive theorem proving, programming language semantics, and generative AI. You will combine your expertise with that of your coworkers to build new tools that solve code analysis problems previously considered beyond reach. Our application areas span all the way from Infrastructure as Code to high-performance cryptography written in assembly code, while our methods span from interactive theorem proving to automated test generation. 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. https://aws.amazon.com/security/provable-security/ Key job responsibilities Work with customer teams to understand the nature of their software and the properties they need to establish of it. Identify tools and methods capable of addressing the verification needs of customers, including any novel analysis capabilities required. Use techniques spanning property-based testing to model checkers, and interactive theorem provers to establish program properties. Explore generative AI techniques to help customers formalize their requirements, find revealing tests, generate required boiler plate for testing and model checking, and find and repair program proofs. About the team The Agentic Automated Reasoning Group at AWS develops and applies state of the art formal methods and automated reasoning techniques to ensure the security, reliability, and correctness of AWS services and customer applications, with a strong focus on AI based agents. Our work innovates tools and services to perform verification at scale and apply them to build safe and secure systems at AWS. We are also pioneering the use of formal verification and automated reasoning to develop agentic systems, ensuring AI agents operate within defined safety boundaries.
US, WA, Seattle
How to use the world’s richest collection of e-commerce data to improve payments experience for our customers? Amazon Payments Data Science team seeks a Data Scientist for building analytical solutions that will address increasingly complex business questions in the Amazon Currency convertor space. Amazon.com has a culture of data-driven decision-making and demands insights that are timely, accurate, and actionable. This team provides a fast-paced environment where every day brings new challenges and new opportunities. As a Data Scientist in this team, you will be driving the analytics roadmap and will provide descriptive and predictive solutions to the Amazon currency convertor business team through a combination of Gen AI, LLM and other machine learning techniques for text analytics, segmentation and prediction. You will need to collaborate effectively with internal stakeholders, cross-functional teams to solve problems, create operational efficiencies, and deliver successfully against high organizational standards. Key job responsibilities • Understand the applications of causal inference models on real datasets, including assessment of marketing campaigns, online experiments, uplift analysis etc • Understand the business reality behind large sets of data and develop meaningful solutions comprising of analytics as well as marketing management • Work closely with internal stakeholders like the business teams, engineering teams and partner teams and align them with respect to your focus are • Innovate by adapting new modeling techniques and procedures • Effective exploratory data analysis, and model building using industry standard regression and classification techniques such as Random Forest, XGBoost package, Keras framework • Demonstrate thorough technical knowledge Fine Tuning of Amazon LLMs to handle large blocks of text, using Generative AI to solve for summarization tasks and prevent catastrophic forgetting, feature engineering of massive datasets, • Be passionate about working with huge data sets and be someone who loves to bring datasets together to answer business questions. You should have deep expertise in creation and management of datasets • Have exposure at implementing and operating stable, scalable data flow solutions from production systems into end-user facing applications/reports. These solutions will be fault tolerant, self-healing and adaptive