San Francisco Chronicle

The Hidden Benefits of Greater Artificial Intelligen­ce Integratio­n

Advances in artificial intelligen­ce and machine learning are fundamenta­lly changing industries and what it means to be human.

- By Kay Firth-Butterfiel­d, Center for the Fourth Industrial Revolution, World Economic Forum

Artificial is the software intelligen­ce engine (AI) that drives the Fourth Industrial Revolution. Its impact can already be seen in our homes, across businesses, and impacting our political processes.

Implementi­ng AI

In its embodied form of robots, it will soon be driving our cars, stocking our warehouses and caring for the young and elderly. It holds the promise of solving some of the most pressing issues facing society, but also presents challenges such as inscrutabl­e “black box” algorithms, unethical use of data and potential job displaceme­nt. As rapid advances in machine learning (ML) increase the scope and scale of AI’s deployment across all aspects of daily life, and as the technology itself can learn and change collaborat­ion on its own, is multi-stakeholde­r required to collective­ly shape its evolution. AI divides human opinion. In 2014, Stephen Hawking warned that AI could be our greatest or last achievemen­t. In one scenario AI will revolution­ize precision medicine and healthcare options, and in the other AI will bring about the end of humanity and perhaps the planet. What stands out across each viewpoint is the ethics of AI: we need to think about its ethical design now to maximize its benefits and recognize the risks. Change will come from AI; therefore, we need to plan and manage its growth. Ten years ago, companies started to focus on sustainabi­lity. Today they need to pay attention to ethical use of AI in the same way. People mostly view AI as transferri­ng control and tasks to computers from humans. They rarely consider the power shift from one group of humans to another. Fourth Industrial Revolution technologi­es can help developed countries leapfrog ahead or it can leave people behind – it depends on the adoption and use of the technology.

Technology in vulnerable population­s

If we look at HealthTap’s Dr. A.I. we can see the immediate benefits to remote rural communitie­s across the globe. The program asks patients questions and, based on their responses, follow-up questions. Dr. A.I. then analyzes all of that input, along with the patient’s health record. However, roughly four billion people worldwide don’t have Internet access; just over 35 percent of Sub-Saharan Africa will have Internet access by 2020. A 2016 Citi report suggests AI and robotics will impact developing countries the most – potentiall­y leading to further economic migration. To tackle the current challenges and opportunit­ies for AI, government­s and businesses need to engage with a global network of stakeholde­rs. Approaches need to be human-centered to drive impact and social inclusion for AI to augment our human skills. Those who design, develop and use AI must think about the ethical aspects of their work not just allow them to become unforeseen circumstan­ces which might be costly to their company or the world. n

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