{"id":83561,"date":"2012-08-02T17:03:00","date_gmt":"2012-08-02T14:03:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.technion.ac.il\/blog\/all-eyes-on-cortica-as-it-raises-7-million\/"},"modified":"2012-08-02T17:03:00","modified_gmt":"2012-08-02T14:03:00","slug":"all-eyes-on-cortica-as-it-raises-7-million","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.technion.ac.il\/en\/blog\/all-eyes-on-cortica-as-it-raises-7-million\/","title":{"rendered":"All eyes on CORTICA as it raises +7 million"},"content":{"rendered":"
Cortica gets $7M to bestow computers with the power of sight.<\/strong> Israeli startup Cortica<\/a> raised $7 in a second round of funding. The investment was led by Horizons Ventures<\/a>,\u00a0owned by the Hong Kong billionaire Li Ka-Shing.<\/a> Venture capitalist Ynon Kreiz also participated in the round, as did Ynon Kreiz, the former Chairman & CEO of the Endemol Group<\/a>, the world’s largest independent television production company. The company had already raised $4 million from a group of high quality angel investors. Mr. Kreiz joins Cortica as its Chairman; founder Technion graduate Igal Raichelgauz<\/a> continues as CEO.<\/p>\n Cortica\u2019s image recognition technology fuses neuroscience and computer science by imbuing computers the ability to comprehend visual content on the web in real-time. The core technology was developed at Technion, in Haifa, Israel, by a team of neuroscientists and digital media experts. The technology functions similarly to the human cortex and can identify patterns, and make classifications.<\/p>\n Cortica was conceived in 2006 with a vision to fundamentally revolutionize the way computers understand images and video. The essence of Cortica’s Image2Text\u2122 technology lies in its ability to automatically extract the core concepts in images and video, and map these concepts to key-words and textual taxonomies.<\/p>\n
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