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September 8, 2021 | Alumni

Alumni AI startup Cohere raises US$40-million for natural language software: Globe and Mail

Aidan Gomez smiles, leaning on a stone balustrade above a sign that reads: University of Toronto.

Aidan Gomez (BSc 2018 UC), pictured here in 2017, introduced the concept that underpins the Cohere's natural language processing technology in a research paper (photo by Nina Haikara)


Cohere Inc., an AI startup co-founded by University of Toronto alumni and backed by some of the University’s most recognized AI luminaries, has raised US$40 million as it readies the launch of technology that could revolutionize how humans converse with machines, the Globe and Mail reported.

Cohere’s software is based on a technology called “transformers” – AI tools that that boost the performance of natural language processing (NLP) programs, the newspaper said. The result is a product that can improve the quality of conversations between humans and machines, as in the case of customer service chatbots.

CEO Aidan Gomez (BSc 2018 UC), who previously interned with U of T Emeritus Distinguished Professor Geoffrey Hinton at his Google lab, introduced the concept of transformers in a 2017 paper. He said the company, founded in 2019, is preparing to make its product more widely available in the coming months. “We really want to make it useful to everyone,” Gomez told the Globe.

The company’s two other co-founders are Nick Frosst (BSc 2016 WDW), who also worked with Hinton at Google, and Ivan Zhang, a former U of T computer science student who studied here from 2014 to 2016.

The Series A financing was provided by venture capital firms Index Ventures, Section 32 and Radical Ventures, as well as leading AI experts that included Hinton and Raquel Urtasun, a professor in U of T’s department of computer science in the Faculty of Arts & Science and founder of autonomous driving startup Waabi.

Read the story in the Globe and Mail

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