More News from IWER
Why is Europe's economy falling short?
Professor Simon Johnson sat down with fellow Nobel laureate economist Philippe Aghion to examine what ails Europe and how to revive its dynamism.
Who will actually thrive in the hybrid A.I.-human work force
Institute Professor Daron Acemoglu said: "I am convinced that artificial intelligence is quite different from human intelligence. Humans are not very good at absorbing massive volumes of information or sifting through unstructured data for relevant patterns. A.I. models have, as yet, no genuine creativity and no capacity for trial-and-error learning grounded in interaction with the physical world. When two things are different, the last thing you want is to try to mimic one with the other. It is a fool's errand to try to get one to do everything that the other one does. They should work together."
3 questions for MIT's Peter Hirst
"The area I am most excited about right now is the relationship between AI, leadership, and organizational change," said Peter Hirst, senior associate dean of executive education. "Of course, executives need to understand what AI is and what it can do. But the more interesting question is how leaders should make decisions, redesign work, build trust, develop people, and create value when technology is moving so quickly."
From the funnel to the operating system: how AI is changing marketing.
To better understand the challenge of complex systems, it is worth turning to a field that has been dealing with this challenge for decades: System Dynamics, developed at MIT and formalized in the work of professor John Sterman, author of "Business Dynamics." The System Dynamics vision formalizes what was already a reality: marketing is not a sequence of steps, but a feedback system. Everything influences everything else. As Sterman summarized, "cause and effect are distant in time and space."
With just days left, the U.S. opening match at the World Cup is still not sold out
Senior lecturer Ben Shields said perceptions of the tournament have been shaped by how expensive tickets and travel have been for a tournament taking place across an entire continent. That, he said, "does not seem to sit well with many. The hope for FIFA is that once the matches start and the greatest players in the world compete for the most prestigious prize of them all, the sport as business lens will fade into the background and the World Cup will be seen and experienced as the enduring global institution that it is."
AI is letting companies cut entry-level jobs. Here's why that is a 'critical strategic mistake,' according to an MIT economist.
IDE research scientist Frank Nagle said that companies that cut junior staff in the name of AI are making a "critical strategic mistake." He framed the problem in two dimensions. First, if companies don't hire junior people, they are missing out on choosing who will run the firm in a decade. Second, junior people benefit from using AI and reorienting their workflows more than senior people. "There’s a lot to be learned from the way that junior people are interacting with AI," Nagle said.
Smart meters are modernizing our aging electric grids, here's how
"Everyday life and economic activity really depend on having a high-quality, reliable supply of electricity," assistant professor Jacquelyn Pless said. "Our research showed that smart meters can really enable utilities to improve performance and quality of service. Smart meters don't just passively collect data; they can actively reshape utility decisions. Installing more meters alone is not going to be enough. The real benefits come when utilities make use of that data to improve operations, reliability, and customer service," she said. Read more at MIT Sloan's "Ideas Made to Matter."
Neil Thompson, director of MIT Futuretech: 'We have no evidence of significant job losses due to AI systems.'
Neil Thompson, principal research scientist and director of FutureTech, an interdisciplinary group at MIT Sloan and the MIT Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Lab (CSAIL), rejects extreme views of the impact of Artificial Intelligence on work. He explains that this is one of the areas the lab has studied most extensively and deserves the attention of governments and the preparation of society, but he dismisses the apocalyptic scenario that many fear.
Here's how long it will take for AI to reach its potential
There is a hard ceiling on what present-day AI can do. "Whether you're a CEO, a manager, a journalist, a professor, or a construction worker, I see your skills as beyond what AI can perform," said Institute Professor Daron Acemoglu, who believes current AI tools will have an impact on only a fraction of jobs.
As oil prices spike, talk of 'demand destruction' sets in
In the short term, said professor Catherine Wolfram, "people just can't afford these higher prices, and so are being forced to find alternatives. The most worrying thing is the demand that's not destroyed: the purchases of gasoline or jet fuel or diesel that people still have to make at these much higher prices."