More News from IWER

Press Financial Times

Sustainable thinking: Research aligned with green goals

A paper, co-authored by assistant professor Michiel Bakker, described efforts to train a large language model as an AI mediator to help small groups in the UK find common ground while discussing divisive political issues such as Brexit, immigration, the minimum wage, climate change, and universal childcare. The paper was rated highly for sustainable development goals (SDG).

Read Article
Press Bangkok Post

Bangkok Bank, MIT aid SMEs and farmers

Professor Y. Karen Zheng said smallholder farmers, who represent 80% of the world's farms and produce more than half of global food calories, remain among the most vulnerable groups despite their critical role in global food security. "Smallholders feed the world, but they're often the ones struggling the most," she said.

Read Article
Press BBC

The AI job cuts are here — or are they?

Amazon is likely able to automate jobs faster than most of its rivals because of its scale, said associate professor Lawrence Schmidt. "It's not at all crazy to think that Amazon might want to shed certain types of roles, or refrain from hiring additional people in certain types of roles, if they can be quickly automated," he said. "Regardless of what happens to counts of jobs overall you would expect there to be reallocation."

Read Article
Press BigDATAwire

The quiet rise of AI's real enablers

"Models need so much more data and in multiple formats," said principal research scientist George Westerman. "Where it used to be making sense of structured data, which was relatively straightforward, now it's: 'What do we do with all this unstructured data? How do we tag it? How do we organize it? How do we store it?' That's a bigger challenge."

Read Article
Press The Boston Globe

Hey, ChatGPT: What should I get my mom for Christmas?

Without a retail website as an "intermediary," shoppers can find their desired products more efficiently, since an AI algorithm finds results from across the internet and compiles them in one location, said principal research scientist George Westerman. He questioned the reliability and trustworthiness of the results and who might benefit from them. "Who's influencing the recommendations it gives you?" he said. "It's unclear how neutral AI results are because they've got to make money somehow."

Read Article
Load More