Zero One: Are You Ready for AI? – MSPmentor

Posted: February 11, 2017 at 8:28 am

If somebody like Google or Apple announced tomorrow that they had made [AI android] Ava, we would all be surprised, but we wouldnt be that surprised. Alex Garland, writer-director of Ex Machina (2015)

Imagine a smart robot performing delicate surgery under the control of a surgeon. Or an artificial intelligence (AI) machine mapping genomic sequences to identify the link to Alzheimers disease. Or psychiatrists applying AI in natural language processing systems on the voices of patients to assess their risk of suicide.

You dont have to imagine anymore, because all of this is happening right now. The great promise of AI a technology once confined to sci-fi movies lies within the grasp of everyday business. More and more companies are seeing the AI light, and if predictions prove right, this could be the year AI goes mainstream.

Its an incredible time, and its very hard to forecast, what can these things do? said Google co-founder Sergey Brin, speaking at theWorld Economic Forum Annual Meetingin Davos-Klosters, Switzerland, last month.

To be sure, line-of-business executives (LOBs), the new shot-callers for tech, care little about pie-in-the-sky ideas. But theyll pay close attention to real-world business outcomes and may be wondering if AI is right for their businesses. Its a simple answer: If not AI today, AI tomorrow. Thats because AI has the potential to impact nearly every aspect of business, from predicting customer needs to optimizing operations and supply chains.

AI can transform your business, said Forrester analysts Martha Bennett and Mathew Guariniin a research note. AI will be employed across enterprises, doing everything from engaging with customers and employees to automating and improving large elements of the operation.

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Its still early days for AI, but thats about to change.

A Forrester survey of business and tech professionals found only a small number of companies with AI implementations, yet more than half of companies said they plan to invest in AI in the next 12 months. Specifically, 37 percent plan to implement intelligent assistants for customers and 35 percent doing the same with cognitive products. Among AI adopters, 57 percent said improving the customer experience is the biggest benefit. Marketing and sales, product management, and customer support lead the AI charge.

Forrester puts AI deployments into five buckets: speech recognition, such as Amazons Alexa, Apples Siri, Google Assistantand Microsofts Cortana; machine learning, such as Netflixs customer data-driven recommendations; image recognition; advanced discovery techniques, such as IBM Watson; and robotics and self-driving cars.

AI makes the most sense in industries with big data, such as healthcare. After all, AI feeds off of data but in a slightly different way than simple analytics. Whereas analytics software mines data to unearth trends and makepredictions about the future, AI systems use data as a kind of sharpening stone to refine algorithms that produce targeted outcomes, such as diagnosing a type of cancer.

In a way, AI influences the future.

With AI, we can begin to advance our analytics capabilities to personalize the interventions we roll out to patients and move from looking in the rearview mirror at what worked historically to looking at what could work in the future with predictive and prescriptive analytics, said Forrester analysts Kate McCarthy and Nasry Angel in a research note.

Such awesome power has led to decades-worth of apocalyptic sci-fi movies and television shows, from Blade Runner (1982) to Terminator (1984) to The Matrix (1999) to Battlestar Galactica (2004-2009) to Ex Machina (2015) all showing AI machines putting a beatdown on their human creators.

Before waving this off as merely entertainment, LOBs should keep in mind the fear that people have about AI. For instance, AIs ability to gauge the likelihood of an individual becoming sick or getting in a car accident opens up a host of societal issues. Armed with this knowledge, will insurance companies raise rates?

Societal and privacy concerns are just a few of the many challenges facing AI adopters. As with any emerging technology on the verge of taking off, theres a severe technical skills shortage. LOBs must make sure they have the right talent to pull off AI projects, such as engineers to select and prepare data for AI and developers to customize AI software to the use case and fine tune AI algorithms. Its a Herculean task. Forrester says training IBM Watson for a new diagnostic domain takes between six and 18 months, depending on how complicated the domain and how much data available.

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Poor talent can make a mess of things, even more so with AI. Like in the sci-fi movies, AI is as flawed as its human creators. Forrester gives an example of a machine-learning system trained to predict a patients risk for catching pneumonia when admitted to the hospital. Developers of the AI system forgot to put in critical information in the data set. As a result, Forrester says, the AI system told doctors to send home patients with existing asthma conditions a high-risk category.

Human bias also raises its ugly head in AI systems. There have been reports of image-recognition AI automatically identifying a blinking person as Asian and AI systems designed to assist police discriminating against African Americans. Then theres the infamous Tay, a Microsoft Twitter AI chatbot depicted as a pixelated young woman released in spring last year. After Twitter users tricked the chatbot into making outlandishly offensive remarks,Microsoft yanked Tay offlineand apologized.

AI systems can behave unpredictably, Forresters Bennett and Guarini said. In particular when working on complex or advanced systems, developers often dont know how AI-powered programs and neural nets come up with a particular set of results It gets dangerous when the software is left to take decisions entirely unsupervised.

Despite its long history and inherent dangers, AI has come far in the last few years. Consider Googles Brin, a computer scientist who admitted he didnt pay much attention to AI in the 1990s because everyone knew AI didnt work. Before becoming president of Google parent company Alphabet, Brin headed the Google X research group, which, in turn, worked on Google Brain, an AI project that began in 2011.

Today, Google Brain is part of the tech giants DNA.

Fast-forward a few years, and now Brain probably touches every single one of our main projects, ranging from search to photos to ads to everything we do, Brin said, adding, We really dont know the limits.

Tom Kaneshige writes the Zero One blog covering digital transformation, big data, AI, marketing tech and the Internet of Things for line-of-business executives. He is based in Silicon Valley. You can reach him attom.kaneshige@penton.com.

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Zero One: Are You Ready for AI? - MSPmentor

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