 Welcome to the AI for Good Global Summit here at ITU headquarters in Geneva. I'm now joined by Professor Kasahara, who's actually also president of the IEEE Computer Society, which is a huge group of experts like yourself around the world. I know that you're also dealing a lot with education and also you're helping the Japanese in your country with autonomous vehicles. Tell me first of all, what is IEEE? IEEE is the world's largest academic organization having 400,000 members. My IEEE Computer Society is the largest society in IEEE. We have more than 60,000 members in the world. Tomorrow, we will have an MOU with ITU for future collaboration in education, conference, publication, and the standards, everything. So this is a great honor to participate in AI for Good, this event, and I also have an MOU with ITU. Talking about education, how is AI good for education? So a lot of aspects we can collaborate. We will develop a kind of content together with ITU. That kind of content I would like to include for the children. So looking at 10 years, 20 years later, we can create a very stimulus video showing the future organized by AI and computing technology. Maybe children have interest and join our community in the future. So collaboration will be very important. As there's a big debate going on about AI, are you positive about AI for the future? In Japan, robotics is a friend and a whole human. Every time a robot helps humans. Of course, we have a kind of a condition to develop robotics, not harmful for human beings, and collaborate. Of course, we have a minus point. We should think about that kind of a minus factor, but we should push past factors for the human being. Ok, thank you very much Professor. Thank you very much. Well that was Professor Kesahara of Waseda University in Tokyo, talking to us about his role with AI in education, autonomous vehicles, and of course Japan, where robots are so important.