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Stanford Panel Releases Report on AI's Possible Impacts on Urban Life by 2030

Accepted submission by takyon at 2016-09-05 01:20:19
Techonomics

Job automation and self-driving cars are fodder for a new report about the potential impacts of artificial intelligence [stanford.edu]:

A panel of academic and industrial thinkers has looked ahead to 2030 to forecast how advances in artificial intelligence (AI) might affect life in a typical North American city – in areas as diverse as transportation, health care and education ­– and to spur discussion about how to ensure the safe, fair and beneficial development of these rapidly emerging technologies. Titled "Artificial Intelligence and Life in 2030," this year-long investigation is the first product of the One Hundred Year Study on Artificial Intelligence (AI100 [stanford.edu]), an ongoing project hosted by Stanford to inform societal deliberation and provide guidance on the ethical development of smart software, sensors and machines.

[...] The report investigates eight domains of human activity in which AI technologies are beginning to affect urban life in ways that will become increasingly pervasive and profound by 2030. The 28,000-word report includes a glossary to help nontechnical readers understand how AI applications such as computer vision might help screen tissue samples for cancers or how natural language processing will allow computerized systems to grasp not simply the literal definitions, but the connotations and intent, behind words. The report is broken into eight sections focusing on applications of AI. Five examine application arenas such as transportation where there is already buzz about self-driving cars. Three other sections treat technological impacts, like the section on employment and workplace trends which touches on the likelihood of rapid changes in jobs and incomes.

The eight domains discussed in the report [stanford.edu] are Transportation, Home/service robots, Healthcare, Education, Low-resource communities, Public Safety and Security, Employment and [the] Workplace, and Entertainment (no mentions of sexbots here).


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