AI Guru Is Helping Retool Popular Japanese Snacks Like Pocky

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(Bloomberg) -- Junichi Hasegawa has made a career of tackling tough problems, from connecting PlayStation 3 users for online play to researching self-driving cars. Now he wants to invent healthier food ingredients with the help of artificial intelligence.

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The 61-year-old Hasegawa built up Japan’s top AI startup, Preferred Networks Inc. (PFN), by striking deals and partnerships with the country’s industrial giants, from Toyota Motor Corp. to Eneos Holdings Inc. Now at century-old snack food maker Ezaki Glico Co., he’s set his sights on adapting those skills to the notoriously cost-conscious food sector and revitalizing the Osaka-based maker of Pocky chocolate sticks.

Personally recruited by Etsuro Ezaki, the 49-year-old great-grandson of Glico’s founder and recently appointed chief executive officer, Hasegawa’s primary job is to help find the perfect blend of taste and nutrition through massive data harvesting and machine learning. He’ll also be instrumental in linking up Glico’s internal research with outside AI firms like PFN to accelerate the development of healthier foods.

It’s the first leadership transition at the company in four decades, and the new CEO’s mantra is that there’ll be no Glico snacks sold that don’t contribute to people’s wellbeing. The company’s shares rose as much as 1.1% in Tokyo on Thursday after falling about 16% over the past year.

“We asked Hasegawa to join not only because he’s a talented engineer, but because he knows the industry, people and subject very well,” Ezaki said. “Machine learning can help people focus on more creative projects. That’s why we decided to actively leverage AI for a wide range of business we do at Glico.”

At PFN from its inception in 2014 to earlier this year, Hasegawa led business and capital alliances with big local companies including Toyota, Eneos, Fanuc Corp. and Chugai Pharmaceutical Co. He expects Glico to similarly grow through collaboration. “Hasegawa mapped out most of our partnership strategy. Without him, we wouldn’t be where we are today,” PFN co-founder and CEO Toru Nishikawa told Bloomberg News.

Glico’s push into high-tech health foods comes as funding dwindles for startups developing alternative foods and agritech this year. But Glico and Hasegawa are banking on continued demand for healthier eating that will help them tap into a projected $1 trillion industry by developing personalized nutrition plans, automated ovens that bake the perfect Bisco biscuit and new bacteria strains to improve gut health.