Where Is AI Heading - Nokia
Where Is AI Heading - Nokia
Where Is AI Heading - Nokia
Home Thought Leadership Featured articles AI: Always Innovating Where is AI heading?
Where is AI heading?
To deliver on the exponential potential of artificial intelligence, enterprises must
focus on the development of responsible AI
Since the days when computers ran on punch cards and vacuum tubes, humans
have been preoccupied with questions of what those computers could do when
they became even more advanced — and what that would mean for humanity.
Would they be able to help us solve our biggest challenges, from climate change
to world hunger? Or would they turn on us and become our greatest threat? As
artificial intelligence (AI) has started to hit the mainstream, those questions
have become much more tangible.
The path AI takes will depend greatly on what happens in the next few years. While it’s clear that AI offers
massive potential, achieving it in a way that will benefit humanity, avoiding the catastrophic outcomes
depicted in movies like Minority Report, requires doing the hard work today to ensure AI is developed
and used ethically and responsibly.
While generative AI has been getting most of the attention lately, AI researchers like Sanaz Mostaghim, a inputs (video and images) to extract
professor of computer science at Otto von Guericke University Magdeburg in Germany, are quick to point information.
out that generative AI is only one branch of a much wider field. Expert systems are rules-based and
“It’s really great that so many people are talking about AI,” she says. “It gets people asking questions and designed to emulate the decision-making of
thinking about what else it can do. And that gives me the opportunity to showcase other types of AI and humans by applying rules-based logic to
the possibilities they offer for a better life for everyone.”
input data to arrive at a decision.
“You don’t have to have specialized knowledge to leverage the power and
insights from massive amounts of data anymore.”
“These tools help balance the human need to look at enough options to feel confident they’ve made the . AI chat bot tailor-made for the telecom
best decision with the human inability to effectively choose between more than about seven options,” industry – Nokia Digital Assistant leverages
says Mostaghim.
natural language processing and
They can be applied to purchasing decisions, healthcare treatment options or even industrial processes, understands the specific context of a
with AI able to propose options that balance many competing criteria, such as cost-effectiveness vs.
telecommunications network.
environmental sustainability.
Pharmaceutical discovery: AI could be used to accelerate the process of discovering new drugs for
specific medical conditions – whether for pandemic events or conditions that affect only a small number
of people and, therefore, today, would receive minimal research funding and little interest from for-profit
drug companies. It could ultimately even help create truly individualized medications, leading to
personalized medicine.
Personalized education: AI can already be used to supplement conventional education with individual
tutoring. But, the addition of machine learning could enable an AI tutor to adapt based on a student’s
learning style to provide more effective instruction tailored to each student it works with.
Autonomous creation and design: AI-generated art is just the beginning. Future AI could take a set of
requirements and then create entirely new designs for existing products. Pushed to its limits, this could
be one of the most innovative applications of AI. For example, with broad enough criteria, an AI might
opt not to create a better car but to propose a completely new solution to transportation.
“It’s hard to overstate how disruptive AI could be,” says Sean Kennedy, who leads the AI Research Lab at
Nokia Bell Labs. “We’re so used to making changes incrementally based on rigid standards, and AI has the
potential for something else entirely.”
Given the speed at which the technology is developing, there will undoubtedly be many more use cases
to come that have yet to be conceived of.
“In 10 years, anything is possible,” says Lee. “We might see AI superintelligence that outperforms
humans in everything it does.”
Anne Lee
Senior Technology Advisor, Technology Leadership Office
Careers Newsroom
Learning at Nokia
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