North Side Inc

From HandWiki

North Side is a software company based in Montreal . It was founded in 2000, and over the years, the company has been developing natural language understanding and natural language generation (together, dialogue) software since 2001.

History

The company was founded by Eugene Joseph in 2000, after his first company, Virtual Prototypes Inc., went public on the Toronto Stock Exchange in July 1999; that company currently operates as Presagis, a subsidiary of CAE.[1] In the early 2000, North Side did R&D work funded in part by the Canadian Department of National Defence and National Research Council and Telefilm Canada.[2] In 2007, North Side embarked on the development of Bot Colony, the first video game making coherent English dialogue with the characters an integral part of gameplay. The game development was financed in part by the Canada Media Fund. The first two episodes of Bot Colony were launched on Steam on June 17, 2014. Work on Bot Colony started in 2007 (preliminary work on parsing, ontologies, reasoning started much earlier in 2001). At the peak in 2014, the team had 45 members. The company spent a cumulative $23 million on the project, of which $20 million went towards R&D in natural language understanding.[citation needed]

Current activities

The company launched VerbalAccess[3] at Finovate in New York City on September 16, 2015.[4] VerbalAccess provides an English interface to financial services in English.[5] The ability to do banking transactions completely hands-off enables a person to bank through speech while driving, walking, etc. The technology also supports transactions via text-messages. The knowledge base of VerbalAccess spans financial services encompassing banking, credit cards, creditworthiness and loans, savings, and to a more limited extent, insurance and investments.[6]

Technology

For Bot Colony, North Side added a semantic reasoner to the natural language understanding pipeline, which is able to reason on logical axioms expressed in English (the equivalent of Prolog with predicates in English) and on formalized procedural knowledge expressed in English. A key feature distinguishing North Side's technology from an intelligent personal assistant based on machine learning, such as Apple's Siri, Google's Now, Microsoft's Cortana, Nuance's Nina or IBM's Watson, is its ability to clarify ambiguous or incomplete input and handle paraphrases, using a deterministic, rule-based approach. North Side relies on advances in parsing and disambiguation to understand language more precisely, making financial transactions through voice or text-messaging feasible.[7] The underlying database technology supporting North Side's NLU technology is the Versant Object Database from Actian.

References

External links