National Post

Fostering a New Relationsh­ip Between Humans and Machines

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AI is poised to help us deal with some of the most pressing challenges we face in our society, including climate change, transporta­tion, education, and our water supply.

The co-founders of Air (aire defined), a company focused on human-centred AI solutions, believes Canada’s tech-savvy population, collaborat­ive research environmen­t, and rich history of digital game developmen­t positions the country at the forefront of this AI revolution.

Mediaplane­t Why should Canadians be excited about AI?

Dorian Kieken Canada is very well-positioned on the AI front. It already has a thriving talent pool and its universiti­es are forming new generation­s of machine learning experts as we speak. AI can help us understand a lot of different things from new perspectiv­es. It can process in limitless dimensions and show us possibilit­ies that even the best experts today couldn’t consider, complement­ing our own intelligen­ce.

MP What are the challenges with AI, and how does your approach address them?

François Chabot Machine learning AI stands on three pillars: computing power, algorithms, and training. Training AI agents is the most critical piece for them to achieve success, yet humans are more or less absent from this process— it currently relies on pure data and mathematic­al models. Humans are not at the core of current AI training. AIR’S approach is that if AI is to help us solve complex human issues, and do it well, we need more interactio­n between humans and machines, and to train AI on those interactio­ns.

MP Why do government­s need to take an early interest in AI?

Fabrice Condominas AI is themost transforma­tive tech area since the advent of the internet. It’s poised to insert itself at all levels of society, including howwe access services, knowledge, and how we do business. From provincial to federal levels, AI will be a, if not the, major vector of growth for the country. There’s no shortage of problems for government to solve, and AI will help.

MP Should we fear that AI will replace humans?

Grégory Szriftgise­r It’ s understand­able that people have fears about ai. People had fears about the impact of the internet, and while we’re still debating some of its ethical concerns, the internet transforme­d howwe live and do business. It’s the same with AI. However, Aiw on’t replace humans so much as it take over menial tasks and the mundane parts of our jobs, while opening up newopportu­nities and enabling us to focus more on soft and creative skills. If anything, it can allow us to spend more of our time on whatmakes us human and what helps us be happier and more fulfilled.

 ??  ?? Grégory Szriftgise­r
Co-founder, Human Interactio­n Design
Grégory Szriftgise­r Co-founder, Human Interactio­n Design
 ??  ?? Fabrice Condominas Co-founder,
Vision
Fabrice Condominas Co-founder, Vision
 ??  ?? Dorian Kieken Co-founder,
Business
Dorian Kieken Co-founder, Business
 ??  ?? François Chabot
Co-founder, Tech Architectu­re
François Chabot Co-founder, Tech Architectu­re

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