Harrison said the Chinese patent applications covered a broad area of sectors, from autonomous driving to publishing to document management.
South Korea, Japan and India were ranked third, fourth and fifth respectively, with India growing at the fastest rate, the data showed.
Among the top applicants were China's ByteDance — which owns video app TikTok — Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba Group and Microsoft, a backer of start-up OpenAI which created ChatGPT.
While chatbots with the ability to mimic human discourse are already being widely used by retailers and others to improve customer service, GenAI has the potential to transform many other economic sectors such as science, publishing, transportation or security, Harrison said.
“The patent data suggests this is an area that is going to have a profound impact across many different industrial sectors,” he said, highlighting the scientific sector, where GenAI-created molecules have the potential to expedite drug development.
Wipo said it expects a further wave of patents to be filed soon and plans to release a future update of the data, possibly using GenAI to illustrate the trend.
China leading generative AI patents race, UN report says
China is far ahead of other countries in generative AI inventions such as chatbots, filing six times more patents than its closest rival the US, UN data showed on Wednesday.
Generative AI, which produces text, images, computer code and music from existing information is exploding, with more than 50,000 patent applications filed in the past decade, according to the World Intellectual Property Organisation (Wipo), which oversees a system for countries to share recognition of patents.
A quarter of them were filed in 2023, it said.
“This is a booming area, this is an area that is growing at increasing speed, and it's somewhere we expect to grow more,” Christopher Harrison, Wipo patent analytics manager, told reporters.
More than 38,000 GenAI inventions were filed by China between 2014-2023 vs 6,276 filed by the US over the same period, WIPO said.
Harrison said the Chinese patent applications covered a broad area of sectors, from autonomous driving to publishing to document management.
South Korea, Japan and India were ranked third, fourth and fifth respectively, with India growing at the fastest rate, the data showed.
Among the top applicants were China's ByteDance — which owns video app TikTok — Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba Group and Microsoft, a backer of start-up OpenAI which created ChatGPT.
While chatbots with the ability to mimic human discourse are already being widely used by retailers and others to improve customer service, GenAI has the potential to transform many other economic sectors such as science, publishing, transportation or security, Harrison said.
“The patent data suggests this is an area that is going to have a profound impact across many different industrial sectors,” he said, highlighting the scientific sector, where GenAI-created molecules have the potential to expedite drug development.
Wipo said it expects a further wave of patents to be filed soon and plans to release a future update of the data, possibly using GenAI to illustrate the trend.
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