3 ways COVID-19 is transforming advanced analytics and AI – World Economic Forum

While the impact of AI on COVID-19 has been widely reported in the press, the impact of COVID-19 on AI has not received much attention. Three key impact areas have helped shape the use of AI in the past five months and will continue to transform advanced analytics and AI in the months and years to come.

Responding to the COVID-19 pandemic requires global cooperation among governments, international organizations and the business community, which is at the centre of the World Economic Forums mission as the International Organization for Public-Private Cooperation.

Since its launch on 11 March, the Forums COVID Action Platform has brought together 1,667 stakeholders from 1,106 businesses and organizations to mitigate the risk and impact of the unprecedented global health emergency that is COVID-19.

The platform is created with the support of the World Health Organization and is open to all businesses and industry groups, as well as other stakeholders, aiming to integrate and inform joint action.

As an organization, the Forum has a track record of supporting efforts to contain epidemics. In 2017, at our Annual Meeting, the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations (CEPI) was launched bringing together experts from government, business, health, academia and civil society to accelerate the development of vaccines. CEPI is currently supporting the race to develop a vaccine against this strand of the coronavirus.

The speed of decision-making leads to agile data science

The spread of the pandemic first in China and South Korea and then in Europe and the United States was swift and caught most governments, companies and citizens off-guard. This global health crisis developed into an economic crisis and a supply chain crisis within weeks (demand for toilet paper and paper towels alone rose by 600-750% during the week of March 8 in the US). Less than 100,000 global confirmed cases in early March ballooned to more than 13 million by July with more than 580,000 deaths.

With business leaders needing to act quickly, the crisis provided a chance for advanced analytics and AI-based techniques to augment decision-making. While machine learning models were a natural aid, development time for machine learning models or advanced analytical models typically clock in at four to eight weeks and thats after there is a clear understanding of the scope of the use case, as well as the necessary data to train, validate and test the models. If you add use-case evaluation before model development, and model deployment after the model has been trained, you are looking at three to four months from initial conception to production deployment.

"With business leaders needing to act quickly, the crisis provided a chance for advanced analytics and AI-based techniques to augment decision-making."

For solutions in days - not weeks or months - minimum viable AI models (MVAIM) had to be developed in much shorter time frames. Using agile data science methodologies, PwC was able to compress these times significantly, building a SEIRD (Susceptible-Exposed-Infected-Recovered-Death) model of COVID-19 progression for all 50 US states in one week. We then tested, validated and deployed it in another week. Once this initial model was deployed, we extended it to all counties in the US and made the model more sophisticated.

Uncertainty about the future leads to multi-agent simulations

Uncertainty touched every aspect of life under COVID-19 from health, to behavior to economic impact - and expedited the increased adoption of advanced analytics and AI techniques. Uncertainty feeds emotional reactions such as fear, anger and frustration and such emotionally-driven behavior took precedence over rational decisions and actions, especially in the early days of the pandemic.

Uncertainty along the different dimensions made scenario planning the dominant framework for evaluating plans and decisions. Scenario analysis became the predominant paradigm for evaluating disease progression, economic downturn and recovery (e.g., V-, U-, L, W-shaped economic recoveries), as well as for management decision-making on site openings, contingency planning, demand sensing, supply chain disruptions and workforce planning. While qualitative scenario analysis is quite common in the business world, using AI-based simulations to quantitatively understand the causal linkages of different drivers and develop contingent plans of action was brought to the fore by the pandemic.

Modeling human behavior (rational and emotional) became an important aspect of the scenario analysis. For example, compliance to the stay-at-home orders was one of the primary behavioral drivers to help contain the spread of the disease as well as economic activity. As a result, agent-based modeling and simulation was one of the primary advanced analytics and AI techniques used to perform scenario analysis. Daily mobility data on how many miles were driven within each zip code in the country became a proxy for the effectiveness of the stay-at-home orders. The same data was used to model the mobility behavior of people in different parts of US as the pandemic progressed. Agent-based models were one of the best techniques to capture the time- and location-dependent variations in human behavior during the pandemic.

System dynamic modeling, another well-known modeling technique, was critical in integrating multiple decision-making domains (e.g., COVID-19 disease progression, government interventions, people behavior, demand sensing, supply disruptions etc.). Agent-based simulation has traditionally been used by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and other health authorities to model disease progression and health behaviors. Both methods have been used successfully in a number of uncertain scenarios to help make strategic and operational management decisions. Some recent examples include the following:

Lack of historical data leads to upsurge of model-based AI

Given the rarity of the pandemic event there was very little historical data at a global level on the disease. As a result, there was little data to power data-rich, model-free approaches to AI, like deep learning that have become popular in recent years.

By necessity, model-based AI (which leverages the data available) saw a resurgence. As the pandemic progressed, and more data was available, data-rich and model-free approaches could be combined, leading to a few key hybrid solutions:

In many ways, the pandemic has highlighted the inadequacies of our systems, processes, governance and behaviors. On the other hand, it has also provided an opportunity for data scientists and AI scientists to put their advanced techniques and tools to use by helping business leaders make decisions in a challenging environment thats dominated by speed, uncertainty and lack of data.

In summary, as organizations manage through this pandemic and transform themselves post-pandemic three key learnings are worth keeping in mind. First, focus on agile data science methods that address the speed, urgency, and uncertainty of decision making. Second, build and manage your business using dynamic and resilient models (e.g., scenario-based simulations using system dynamic and agent-based models) that capture the inter-relationships of multiple domains (e.g., demand, production, supply, finance) and human behavior. Third, combine model-rich and data-rich approaches to obtain the best of both worlds while building AI systems. These approaches can ensure you can seek solutions quickly while maximizing the technologies and processes already in place.

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3 ways COVID-19 is transforming advanced analytics and AI - World Economic Forum

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