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	<title>Tech &#8211; Precision Background Screening</title>
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		<title>AI: Artificial Intelligence</title>
		<link>https://precisionbackgroundscreening.com/ai-artificial-intelligence/</link>
				<pubDate>Sun, 11 Jun 2023 17:57:14 +0000</pubDate>
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		<category><![CDATA[Artificial Intelligence]]></category>
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				<description><![CDATA[<p>For decades, artificial intelligence, or AI, was the engine of high-level STEM research. Most consumers became aware of the technology’s power and potential through internet platforms like Google and Facebook, and retailer Amazon. Today, AI is essential across a vast</p>
<p>The post <a rel="nofollow" href="https://precisionbackgroundscreening.com/ai-artificial-intelligence/">AI: Artificial Intelligence</a> appeared first on <a rel="nofollow" href="https://precisionbackgroundscreening.com">Precision Background Screening</a>.</p>
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<p>For decades, artificial intelligence, or AI, was the engine of high-level <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Science,_technology,_engineering,_and_mathematics">STEM</a> research. Most consumers became aware of the technology’s power and potential through internet platforms like Google and Facebook, and retailer Amazon. Today, AI is essential across a vast array of industries, including health care, banking, retail, and manufacturing.</p>



<p>But its game-changing promise to
do things like improve efficiency, bring down costs, and accelerate research
and development has been tempered of late with worries that these complex,
opaque systems may do more societal harm than economic good. With virtually no
U.S. government oversight, private companies use AI software to make
determinations about health and medicine, employment, creditworthiness, and
even criminal justice without having to answer for how they’re ensuring that
programs aren’t encoded, consciously or unconsciously, with structural biases.</p>



<p>Its growing appeal and utility
are undeniable. Worldwide business spending on AI is expected to hit $50
billion this year and $110 billion annually by 2024, even after the global
economic slump caused by the <a href="https://precisionbackgroundscreening.com/covid-19/">COVID-19</a> pandemic, according to a <a href="https://www.idc.com/getdoc.jsp?containerId=prUS46794720">forecast</a> released in August by technology
research firm IDC. Retail and banking industries spent the most this year, at
more than $5 billion each. The company expects the media industry and federal
and central governments will invest most heavily between 2018 and 2023 and
predicts that AI will be “the disrupting influence changing entire industries
over the next decade.”</p>



<p>“Virtually every big company now
has multiple AI systems and counts the deployment of AI as integral to their
strategy,” said <a href="https://www.hbs.edu/faculty/Pages/profile.aspx?facId=123284&amp;__hstc=44907643.add43840d65ab002103dc8b86a0183da.1527984000219.1527984000220.1527984000221.1&amp;__hssc=44907643.1.1527984000222&amp;__hsfp=1773666937">Joseph Fuller</a>, professor of management
practice at Harvard Business School, who co-leads <a href="https://www.hbs.edu/managing-the-future-of-work/Pages/default.aspx">Managing the Future of Work</a>, a research project that
studies, in part, the development and implementation of AI, including machine
learning, robotics, sensors, and industrial automation, in business and the
work world.</p>



<p>Early on, it was popularly
assumed that the future of AI would involve the automation of simple repetitive
tasks requiring low-level decision-making. But AI has rapidly grown in
sophistication, owing to more powerful computers and the compilation of huge
data sets. One branch, machine learning, notable for its ability to sort and
analyze massive amounts of data and to learn over time, has transformed
countless fields, including education.</p>



<p>Firms now use AI to manage
sourcing of materials and products from suppliers and to integrate vast troves
of information to aid in strategic decision-making, and because of its capacity
to process data so quickly, AI tools are helping to minimize time in the pricey
trial-and-error of product development — a critical advance for an industry
like pharmaceuticals, where it costs $1 billion to bring a new pill to market,
Fuller said.</p>



<p>Health care experts see many
possible uses for AI, including with billing and processing necessary
paperwork. And medical professionals expect that the biggest, most immediate
impact will be in analysis of data, imaging, and diagnosis. Imagine, they say,
having the ability to bring all of the medical knowledge available on a disease
to any given treatment decision.</p>



<p>In employment, AI software culls
and processes resumes and analyzes job interviewees’ voice and facial
expressions in hiring and driving the growth of what’s known as “hybrid” jobs.
Rather than replacing employees, AI takes on important technical tasks of their
work, like routing for package delivery trucks, which potentially frees workers
to focus on other responsibilities, making them more productive and therefore
more valuable to employers.<strong>&nbsp;</strong></p>



<p>“It’s allowing them to do more
stuff better, or to make fewer errors, or to capture their expertise and
disseminate it more effectively in the organization,” said Fuller, who has
studied the effects and attitudes of workers who have lost or are likeliest to
lose their jobs to AI.</p>



<p>Though automation is here to
stay, the elimination of entire job categories, like highway toll-takers who
were replaced by sensors because of AI’s proliferation, is not likely,
according to Fuller.</p>



<p>“What we’re going to see is jobs
that require human interaction, empathy, that require applying judgment to what
the machine is creating [will] have robustness,” he said.</p>



<p>While big business already has a
huge head start, small businesses could also potentially be transformed by AI,
says <a href="https://www.hbs.edu/competitiveness/faculty/Pages/faculty-profile-details.aspx?profile=kmills">Karen Mills</a> ’75, M.B.A. ’77, who ran the
U.S. Small Business Administration from 2009 to 2013. With half the country
employed by small businesses before the COVID-19 pandemic, that could have
major implications for the national economy over the long haul.</p>



<p>Rather than hamper small
businesses, the technology could give their owners detailed new insights into
sales trends, cash flow, ordering, and other important financial information in
real time so they can better understand how the business is doing and where
problem areas might loom without having to hire anyone, become a financial
expert, or spend hours laboring over the books every week, Mills said.</p>



<p>One area where AI could
“completely change the game” is lending, where access to capital is difficult
in part because banks often struggle to get an accurate picture of a small
business’s viability and creditworthiness.</p>



<p>“It’s much harder to look inside
a business operation and know what’s going on” than it is to assess an individual,
she said.</p>



<p>Information opacity makes the
lending process laborious and expensive for both would-be borrowers and
lenders, and applications are designed to analyze larger companies or those
who’ve already borrowed, a built-in disadvantage for certain types of
businesses and for historically underserved borrowers, like women and minority
business owners, said Mills, a senior fellow at HBS.</p>



<p>But with AI-powered software
pulling information from a business’s bank account, taxes, and online
bookkeeping records and comparing it with data from thousands of similar
businesses, even small community banks will be able to make informed
assessments in minutes, without the agony of paperwork and delays, and, like
blind auditions for musicians, without fear that any inequity crept into the
decision-making.</p>



<p>“All of that
goes away,” she said.</p>



<h4>A veneer of objectivity</h4>



<p>Not
everyone sees blue skies on the horizon, however. Many worry whether the coming
age of AI will bring new, faster, and frictionless ways to discriminate and
divide at scale.</p>



<p>“Part
of the appeal of algorithmic decision-making is that it seems to offer an
objective way of overcoming human subjectivity, bias, and prejudice,” said
political philosopher <a href="https://scholar.harvard.edu/sandel/home">Michael
Sandel</a>, Anne
T. and Robert M. Bass Professor of Government. “But we are discovering that
many of the algorithms that decide who should get parole, for example, or who
should be presented with employment opportunities or housing … replicate and
embed the biases that already exist in our society.”</p>



<p>AI presents three major areas of
ethical concern for society: privacy and surveillance, bias and discrimination,
and perhaps the deepest, most difficult philosophical question of the era, the
role of human judgment, said Sandel, who teaches a course in the moral, social,
and political implications of new technologies.</p>



<p>“Debates about privacy safeguards
and about how to overcome bias in algorithmic decision-making in sentencing,
parole, and employment practices are by now familiar,” said Sandel, referring
to conscious and unconscious prejudices of program developers and those built
into&nbsp;datasets used to train the software. “But we’ve not yet wrapped our
minds around the hardest question: Can smart machines outthink us, or are
certain elements of human judgment indispensable in deciding some of the most
important things in life?”</p>



<p>Panic over AI suddenly injecting
bias into everyday life <em>en masse</em>
is overstated, says Fuller. First, the business world and the workplace, rife
with human decision-making, have always been riddled with “all sorts” of biases
that prevent people from making deals or landing contracts and jobs.</p>



<p>When calibrated carefully and
deployed thoughtfully, resume-screening software allows a wider pool of
applicants to be considered than could be done otherwise, and should minimize
the&nbsp;potential for favoritism that comes with human gatekeepers, Fuller
said.</p>



<p>Sandel disagrees. “AI not only
replicates human biases, it confers on these biases a kind of scientific
credibility. It makes it seem that these predictions and judgments have an
objective status,” he said.</p>



<p>In the world of lending,
algorithm-driven decisions do have a potential “dark side,” Mills said. As
machines learn from data sets they’re fed, chances are “pretty high” they may
replicate many of the banking industry’s past failings that resulted in
systematic disparate treatment of African Americans and other marginalized
consumers.</p>



<p>“If we’re not thoughtful and
careful, we’re going to end up with redlining again,” she said.</p>



<p>A highly regulated industry,
banks are legally on the hook if the algorithms they use to evaluate loan
applications end up inappropriately discriminating against classes of
consumers, so those “at the top levels” in the field are “very focused” right
now on this issue, said Mills, who closely studies the rapid changes in
financial technology, or “fintech.”</p>



<p>“They really
don’t want to discriminate. They want to get access to capital to the most
creditworthy borrowers,” she said. “That’s good business for them, too.”</p>



<h4>Oversight overwhelmed </h4>



<p>Given its power and expected
ubiquity, some argue that the use of AI should be tightly regulated. But
there’s little consensus on how that should be done and who should make the
rules.</p>



<p>Thus far, companies that develop
or use AI systems largely self-police, relying on existing laws and market
forces, like negative reactions from consumers and shareholders or the demands
of highly-prized AI technical talent to keep them in line.</p>



<p>“There’s no businessperson on the
planet at an enterprise of any size that isn’t concerned about this and trying
to reflect on what’s going to be politically, legally, regulatorily, [or]
ethically acceptable,” said Fuller.</p>



<p>Firms already consider their own
potential liability from misuse before a product launch, but it’s not realistic
to expect companies to anticipate and prevent every possible unintended
consequence of their product, he said.</p>



<p>Few think the federal government
is up to the job, or will ever be.</p>



<p>“The regulatory bodies are not
equipped with the expertise in artificial intelligence to engage in [oversight]
without some real focus and investment,” said Fuller, noting the rapid rate of
technological change means even the most informed legislators can’t keep pace.
Requiring every new product using AI to be prescreened for potential social
harms is not only impractical, but would create a huge drag on innovation.</p>



<p><a href="https://www.hks.harvard.edu/faculty/jason-furman">Jason Furman</a>, a professor of the practice of
economic policy at Harvard Kennedy School, agrees that government regulators
need “a much better technical understanding of artificial intelligence to do
that job well,” but says they could do it.</p>



<p>Existing bodies like the National
Highway Transportation Safety Association, which oversees vehicle safety, for
example, could handle potential AI issues in autonomous vehicles rather than a
single watchdog agency, he said.</p>



<p>“I wouldn’t have a central AI
group that has a division that does cars, I would have the car people have a
division of people who are really good at AI,” said Furman, a former top
economic adviser to President Barack Obama.</p>



<p>Though keeping AI regulation
within industries does leave open the possibility of co-opted enforcement,
Furman said industry-specific panels would be far more knowledgeable about the
overarching technology of which AI is simply one piece, making for more
thorough oversight.</p>



<p>While the European Union already
has rigorous data-privacy laws and the European Commission is considering a
formal regulatory framework for ethical use of AI, the U.S. government has
historically been late when it comes to tech regulation.</p>



<p>“I think we should’ve started
three decades ago, but better late than never,” said Furman, who thinks there
needs to be a “greater sense of urgency” to make lawmakers act.</p>



<p>Business leaders “can’t have it
both ways,” refusing responsibility for AI’s harmful consequences while also
fighting government oversight, Sandel maintains.</p>



<p>“The problem is these big tech
companies are neither self-regulating, nor subject to adequate government
regulation. I think there needs to be more of both,” he said, later adding: “We
can’t assume that market forces by themselves will sort it out. That’s a
mistake, as we’ve seen&nbsp;with Facebook and other tech giants.”</p>



<p>Last fall, Sandel taught “<a href="https://gened.fas.harvard.edu/classes/tech-ethics">Tech Ethics</a>,” a popular new Gen Ed course
with Doug Melton, co-director of Harvard’s <a href="https://www.mayoclinic.org/tests-procedures/bone-marrow-transplant/in-depth/stem-cells/art-20048117">Stem Cell</a> Institute. As in his legendary
“Justice” course, students consider and debate the big questions about new
technologies, everything from gene editing and robots to privacy and
surveillance.</p>



<p>“Companies have to think
seriously about the ethical dimensions of what they’re doing and we, as
democratic citizens, have to educate ourselves about tech and its social and
ethical implications — not only to decide what the regulations should be, but
also to decide what role we want big tech and social media to play in our
lives,” said Sandel.</p>



<p>Doing that will require a major
educational intervention, both at Harvard and in higher education more broadly,
he said.</p>



<p>“We have to enable all students
to learn enough about tech and about the ethical implications of new
technologies so that when they are running companies or when they are acting as
democratic citizens, they will be able to ensure that technology serves human
purposes rather than undermines a decent civic life.”</p>



<p>If you found this
information useful, please check out our <a href="https://precisionbackgroundscreening.com/blog/">blog</a> for more articles
like this.</p>



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