The Information Technology and Innovation Foundation assessed the trio’s AI capabilities by analyzing data across six categories: talent, research, commercial development, hardware, adoption, and data. The think tank found that while the US still holds a substantial overall lead, China is reducing the gap in several important areas — while the EU’s position is slipping: Of the 100 total available points, the US scooped 44.6, followed by China with 32, and the EU with 23.3. [Read: How this company leveraged AI to become the Netflix of Finland] The EU scored impressively on research quality. But it’s dropped further behind the US in number of funding deals, acquisitions of AI companies, and the amount of AI firms that have raised at least $1 million in funding. The researchers expect the UK’s departure from the EU to further diminish the bloc’s AI capabilities. They note that British AI firms received nearly 40% of the EU’s venture and equity deals in 2019, and that five of the bloc’s 14 firms currently developing AI chips are based in the UK. The US, meanwhile, performed strongly in areas such as startup funding and research investment. However, China has improved the quality of its own AI research. The country has also surpassed the EU as the world leader in AI publications, and is now home to nearly twice as many of the world’s top 500 supercomputers as the US.AI Study author Daniel Castro said the Chinese government is reaping the benefits of its strategic focus on: