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What artificial intelligence will look like in 2030

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by Leah Burrows, Harvard SEAS Politics, Law & Society Opinions September 16, 2016 Artificial intelligence (AI) has already transformed our lives — from the autonomous cars on the roads to the robotic vacuums and smart thermostats in our homes. Over the next 15 years, AI technologies will continue to make inroads in nearly every area of our lives, from education to entertainment, health care to security. The question is, are we ready? Do we have the answers to the legal and ethical quandaries that will certainly arise from the increasing integration of AI into our daily lives? Are we even asking the right questions? Now, a panel of academics and industry thinkers has looked ahead to 2030 to forecast how advances in AI might affect life in a typical North American city and spark discussion about how to ensure the safe, fair, and beneficial development of these rapidly developing technologies. “Artificial Intelligence and Life in 2030” is the first product of the One Hundred Year Study on Artificial Intelligence (AI100), an ongoing project hosted by Stanford University to inform debate and provide guidance on the ethical development of smart software, sensors, and machines. Every five years for the next 100 years, the AI100 project will release a report that evaluates the status of AI technologies and their potential impact on the world. Barbara Grosz, Higgins Professor of Natural Sciences at the Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences, chairs the AI100 Standing Committee. “Now is the time to consider the design, ethical, and policy challenges that AI technologies raise,” said Grosz. “If we tackle these issues now and take them seriously, we will have systems that are better designed in the future and more appropriate policies to guide their use.” “We believe specialized AI applications will become both increasingly common and more useful by 2030, improving our economy and quality of life,” said Peter Stone, a computer scientist at the University of Texas, Austin, and chair of the report. “But this technology will also create profound challenges, affecting jobs and incomes and other issues that we should begin addressing now to ensure that the benefits of AI are broadly shared.” The report investigates eight areas of human activity in which AI technologies are already affecting urban life and will be even more pervasive by 2030: transportation, home/service robots, health care, education, entertainment, low-resource communities, public safety and security, employment, and the workplace. Some of the biggest challenges in the next 15 years will be creating safe and reliable hardware for autonomous cars and health care robots; gaining public trust for AI systems, especially in low-resource communities; and overcoming fears that the technology will marginalize humans in the workplace. Issues of liability and accountability also arise with questions such as: Who is responsible when a self-driven car crashes or an intelligent medical device fails? How can we prevent AI applications from being used for racial discrimination or financial cheating? The report doesn’t offer solutions but rather is intended to start a conversation between scientists, ethicists, policymakers, industry leaders, and the general public. Grosz said she hopes the AI 100 report “initiates a century-long conversation about ways AI-enhanced technologies might be shaped to improve life and societies. This article is published in collaboration with Harvard Gazette and World Economic Forum. If you liked this article, you may also want to read: Taking measure of artificial intelligence and the Turing Test Artificial intelligence expedites breast cancer risk prediction How cooperative behaviour could make artificial intelligence more human Artificial intelligence could transform healthcare, but we need to accept it first Why football, not chess, is the true final frontier for robotic artificial intelligence See all the latest robotics news on Robohub, or sign up for our weekly newsletter. Leah Burrows is a Science and Technology Communications Officer at Harvard Paulson School... read more Harvard SEAS creates collaborative bridges across Harvard and educates the next generation of global leaders... read more AI AI100 Artificial Intelligence One Hundred Year Study on Artificial Intelligence robotics World Economic Forum Research & Innovation Business & Finance Health & Medicine Politics, Law & Society Arts & Entertainment Education & DIY Events Military & Defense Exploration & Mining Mapping & Surveillance Enviro. & Agriculture Aerial Automotive Industrial Automation Consumer & Household Space latest posts popular reported elsewhere InterDrone 2016: Professionalization and business of drone industry by Frank Tobe Machines can learn by simply observing, without being told what to look for by Roderich Gross Integrators are dead, long live the integrator by Frank Tobe Watch humanoid robot Atlas balance on one foot by Robohub Editors Breaking down robotaxi economics by Brad Templeton, Robocars.com Top 10 technologies in precision agriculture by Frank Tobe Robohub roundtable: Cybathlon and advancements in prosthetics by Kassie Perlongo Tune in: Economist holding Facebook Live Q&A about AI and the future of work by Robohub Editors The Drone Center’s Weekly Roundup: 9/12/16 by Center for the Study of the Drone at Bard College Robotiq launches DoF: A community for robotics professionals by Robotiq Inc. latest posts popular reported elsewhere Robotiq launches DoF: A community for robotics professionalsHAPTIX program underway to create prosthetic hand system that moves and feels like a real handHuman-robot disaster response team successfully deployed robots in earthquake damaged monumentsYesterday I looked through the eyes of a robotMachines can learn by simply observing, without being told what to look forRobohub roundtable: Cybathlon and advancements in prostheticsThe evolution of assembly lines: A brief historyHow do self-driving cars work?Farming with robotsSweep: a low cost LiDAR sensor for smart consumer products latest posts popular reported elsewhere Autopilot cited in death of Chinese Tesla driver | The New York Times Uber starts self-driving car pickups in Pittsburgh | TechCrunch Surgeons use robot to operate inside eye in world first The Head of CMU’s Robotics Lab Says Self-Driving Cars Are ‘Not Even Close’ Japan to develop 3-D maps for self-driving cars- Nikkei Asian Review No Sailors Needed: Robot Sailboats Scour the Oceans for Data Boris Sofman & Hanns Tappeiner: The Journey to Consumer Robotics | CMU RI Seminar Drive.ai uses deep learning to teach self-driving cars – and to give them a voice Baidu and Nvidia to Build Artificial Intelligence Platform for Self-Driving Cars How Tech Giants Are Devising Real Ethics for Artificial Intelligence Robot Tractor Draws Crowds on Debut at Iowa Farm Show 3D Print Your Own Breakfast Inside the Robot-Run Genetics Lab of Tomorrow (Just Watch Your Step) Interview: How to build a lionfish-killing robot Lowe’s robot wants to help you find the plumbing aisle Legions of nanorobots target cancerous tumours with precision Why the death of Moore’s Law could give birth to more human-like machines Teaching physics 101 to robots is harder than you think FAA expects 600,000 commercial drones within a year | NPR Cybathlon adds robots to olympics Autonomous lethal weapons May 17, 2013 A dedicated jobs board for the global robotics community. 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