61% of adults in the US are afraid of artificial intelligence (AI)! 42% of surveyed attendees at the Yale CEO summit believe AI could destroy humanity in the near future. The attention-grabbing headlines stating AI will replace jobs, or take over humanity in some sort or another, are relentless. But are they based on fact or is it simply a marketing trick to rack up the clicks and drive fear towards a technology that has already been around for a while (whether you have noticed it or not, and well before ChatGPT made the headlines!) and has the potential to make fundamental shifts to our society. Yes, there are risks associated with this technology, and so have been with all technologies we have witnessed having entered our life, but we as society can together decide where AI will go. Let's think outside the headline box and think big about how AI can serve humanity for the better.
AI is not new. It has been around for a while and its father, Alan Turing, who, in 1935 (almost 90 years ago!), for the first time described a self-modifying and self-improving program that learns from experience. In 1947, he talked about computer intelligence in possibly the first public lecture on this topic in the world. AI has come a long way since and entered our daily lives long ago.
If you are afraid that AI will become human-like and turn against us (hello, Terminator!), maybe we just need to become better role models because AI learns from us, and we decide how and where it is going to be used. So, let's not get caught up in dramatic headlines and sci-fi movies and rather learn how we can best use AI as a tool to propel our society.
There were applications where AI has been very supportive for a while now. For example, medical examinations where the algorithm can predict colon cancer (see our case study with CHI) faster and with a much higher accuracy as human doctors. Does that replace the doctor? No! It frees up the doctor's job to focus on other high value tasks like having more time for those sensitive conversations that need to be held with patients and/or being able to see more patients while still providing reliable diagnosis every time.
AI can help research institutions to analyse, compare, and join together dots and findings of various research papers, laboratory reports, medical information, chemistry data, pharmacology knowledge, and other areas of speciality to support researchers in finding the next key ingredient for a new drug to treat a disease? Well, speeding up that lengthy research process is already reality for Elseiver.
an AI lawyer for example can go through stacks of law books and cases very quickly to come to a conclusion or multiple conclusions for a case? How about instead of taking this outcome as the decision for the case and instead as a question for humans to discuss whether that outcome is really the outcome we would want it to be? Is it fair? Does it reflect human values that we want to cherish? Maybe the stacks of law books are outdated, and some laws need to be refreshed, amended, removed to reflect where we as society want to be. It would take many humans and years to work through the ever-growing web of laws, legislation, and regulations. We humans have created this complexity and maybe it needs AI to simplify it again and point out areas of concern.
If the AI lawyer would be used as above, it is an assistance to current lawyers and society while yes, lawyers' job profile and responsibilities may shift, but it is not replacing lawyers. Maybe with that assistance it brings lawyers back to focus on why most of them became lawyers in the first instance: to fight for fairness and justice in society. How many more cases could be completed within the same time as one case needs at the moment if we had useful AI assistance? How much more justice could be brought to us? How much more trust into the currently broken and overloaded legal system could be re-established? And no, I am not talking about anything similar to the Minority Report movie!
a generative AI tool can help us re-discover our spark of inspiration. Instead of just using it to submit the next (annoying) paper at university, maybe it can re-connect us with the power of words. Always being short on time and needing to be more efficient, maybe this has taken away the average person's ability/time to write beautifully, to create art, to paint a picture, etc. AI doesn't put limits on itself like humans do, so why not get inspired by AI and unlimit yourself? Use your gifts (beyond the mind).
AI can remove many/all of those energy consuming, brain-wrenching, annoying tasks from several areas of our life? Yes, life would be different, but does that automatically mean it must be worse and humans will go extinct? No! How about this change gives us the opportunity to re-prioritise what makes us human? Is it really your job? How often are you complaining about it? How often do you wish you had more time for your family? Your hobbies? Travel? Sleep? Relaxation? Here is a possible part of the solution to make things better as you have asked for but you are afraid of it. Why? Technology in itself is neutral. It's its usage that makes it either supportive to humans or creating damage to ourselves. And we decide about its usage, not AI.
we could use AI in a way to take away the burdens we have created for ourselves in the way society operates at the moment and free up space for us to become more human? To connect more with our body again instead of always being in our mind. Re-connecting with our heart, emotions, livelihoods, joy, creativity, our power to create something new instead of just working through a list of tasks? Get out of the constant work stress (and anxiety for many) and calm our nervous system which will surely positively impact our health as well. How about AI can assist us in creating a healthier society over time?