Mais conteúdo relacionado Semelhante a Artificial Intelligence For Good - Also Makes Business Sense (20) Mais de Bernard Marr (20) Artificial Intelligence For Good - Also Makes Business Sense2. © 2019 Bernard Marr, Bernard Marr & Co. All rights reserved
Title
Text
IntroductionIntroduction
Artificial Intelligence (AI) has been put forward as a potential solution for many
of the gravest problems facing society, from the opioid crisis to poverty and
famine.
But although technology clearly has the potential to do a great deal of good,
there’s a sound business reason that tech companies often pour large
amounts of resources into social projects that don’t seem to align with their
core business of selling software and services.
Artificial Intelligence For Good –
Also Makes Business Sense
3. © 2019 Bernard Marr, Bernard Marr & Co. All rights reserved
Title
Text
IntroductionIntroduction
This is down to the fact that tackling social issues often involves developing
solutions to problems very similar to those faced by businesses. Additionally,
working with governments or NGOs on building these solutions can often
mean access to new datasets. Learning derived from these datasets can later
be developed into products and services to offer to clients (even if the data
itself isn't).
Artificial Intelligence For Good –
Also Makes Business Sense
4. © 2019 Bernard Marr, Bernard Marr & Co. All rights reserved
In 2016, IBM launched a program of initiatives called Science for Social Good. It aimed to
develop technology-driven solutions to 17 issues highlighted by the United Nations
as Sustainable Development Goals(SDGs). These include reducing poverty, inequality, and
damage to the environment, as well as raising standards of healthcare and education across
the world.
Today IBM has announced progress that has been made across 15 of those 17 initiatives
thanks to technology and research it has carried out. I got the chance to speak to two people
involved with this work - IBM fellow Aleksandra Mojsilovic and principal researcher Kush
Varshney – about why this work is valuable to IBM itself, as well as society as a whole.
Mojsilovic told me “Around 2013 or 2014, we were trying to figure out a way to do something
good with our skills and one of the emerging things back then was the Ebola epidemic – we
thought that putting our data skills to work to help with that would be fantastic and we
learned a lot of lessons from doing so.
IBM’s Science for Social Good
5. © 2019 Bernard Marr, Bernard Marr & Co. All rights reserved
"But we found that people were mainly 'doing good' as a volunteer effort – weekends and
hackathons, that sort of thing, which didn't quite seem right. IBM research is pretty big, we
have over 3,000 researchers around the world, and we decided there had to be a way to
leverage these skills more broadly and in a coherent way … it didn't really seem right that we
were just trying to solve these problems in our spare time.“
This was where the idea of integrating IBM’s Science for Social Good with the UN’s SDG’s first
emerged, and its researchers realized the importance of collaborating with governmental and
NGOs with expertise in their fields.
“One thing we learned from Ebola was that we were a bit arrogant,” explains Mojsilovic. “We
thought we have all these skills which we can use to do a great deal of good; then we got a
wake-up call because we realized that these incredibly difficult problems have components to
them, and some are solved by truly understanding the problem, and others by truly
understanding the technology.
IBM’s Science for Social Good
6. © 2019 Bernard Marr, Bernard Marr & Co. All rights reserved
“We learned that having a program that's really focused on creating tools or technology won't
work without the participation of those who really work with these problems.”
Several initiatives were developed that tied directly into the UNs SDGs. These included one
that aimed at fairness around risk assessment in financial services, including health insurance
in the US and mobile-based money lending programs in east Africa. Here, the aim was to use
technology to mitigate against the risk of bias leading to unfair or discriminatory outcomes.
Another aimed the opioid epidemic currently plaguing the US, by harnessing machine
learning to determine which patients were more likely to become addicts after being
prescribed opioid treatments.
Other initiatives include driving data-driven research into multiple sclerosis, developing AI-
driven systems to assist those on low incomes with managing their finances, assisting the UN
in driving its sustainable development goals and predict outbreaks of Zika virus.
IBM’s Science for Social Good
7. © 2019 Bernard Marr, Bernard Marr & Co. All rights reserved
As well as knowing that they were helping to solve some of the most difficult scientific
problems facing our species and planet, researchers were spurred on by the fact that their
work also has value for IBM and their clients.
Mojsilovic tells me, "For example … the opioid project involves causal modelling – a really hot
topic right now in machine learning.
"So when we started looking at problems where causal modelling could help, many of them
are in this space of social intervention, policy development, healthcare intervention, genomics
– so now you get phenomenal material to try out your techniques, and the big problems
feedback to inform you … you create a library of reusable assets, which you can apply to so
many problems.”
Working on world-scale social problems also helps IBM and other tech companies to
investigate ways of scaling their solutions to fit world-scale business problems.
Solutions for World-Scale Business Problems
8. © 2019 Bernard Marr, Bernard Marr & Co. All rights reserved
One example of how this is already being used to help IBM clients is the AI Fairness 360
platform. Elements of this were developed thanks to the work on improving social inclusion
and fairness in finance and lending, Varshney tells me.
“Fairness is a big topic right now in machine learning research. Several projects in the Science
for Good program are around fairness … gender equality or other forms of equality, and
working on fairness in those settings help us to move forward on this journey. Then it’s about
pulling it all together to create these core technologies … and putting some of those
capabilities into the IBM product.”
So, while it’s still true that virtue can be its own reward – helping to tackle world problems at
UN-scale as part of their day-to-day work is likely to increase job satisfaction – there are
certainly sound business reasons behind IBM (and others’) decision to dedicate resources to
solving the world’s problems.
Fairness 360 Platform
9. © 2019 Bernard Marr, Bernard Marr & Co. All rights reserved
As Varshnay tells me, “We’re also very aware these are huge problems, not the kind of things
we will solve with a project or two – they are going to take decades to solve.
“We’re building blocks that others can use and re-use, and take them further – it would be
arrogant of us to say we’re here to save the world, don’t want the message to come across
like that!”
Fairness 360 Platform
10. © 2017 Bernard Marr , Bernard Marr & Co. All rights reserved
© 2018 Bernard Marr, Bernard Marr & Co. All rights reserved
Bernard Marr is an internationally best-selling author, popular keynote speaker, futurist, and a
strategic business & technology advisor to governments and companies. He helps
organisations improve their business performance, use data more intelligently, and
understand the implications of new technologies such as artificial intelligence, big data,
blockchains, and the Internet of Things.
LinkedIn has ranked Bernard as one of the world’s top 5 business influencers. He is a frequent
contributor to the World Economic Forum and writes a regular column for Forbes. Every day
Bernard actively engages his 1.5 million social media followers and shares content that
reaches millions of readers.
Visit The
Website
© 2017 Bernard Marr , Bernard Marr & Co. All rights reserved
© 2019 Bernard Marr, Bernard Marr & Co. All rights reserved
Bernard Marr is an internationally best-selling author, popular keynote speaker, futurist, and a
strategic business & technology advisor to governments and companies. He helps
organisations improve their business performance, use data more intelligently, and
understand the implications of new technologies such as artificial intelligence, big data,
blockchains, and the Internet of Things.
LinkedIn has ranked Bernard as one of the world’s top 5 business influencers. He is a frequent
contributor to the World Economic Forum and writes a regular column for Forbes. Every day
Bernard actively engages his 1.5 million social media followers and shares content that
reaches millions of readers.
Visit The
Website
11. Title
Subtitle
Be the FIRST to receive news,
articles, insights and event
updates from Bernard Marr & Co
straight to your inbox.
Signing up is EASY! Simply fill out
the online form and we’ll be in
touch!
© 2018 Bernard Marr, Bernard Marr & Co. All rights reserved