by Ajay Agrawal (Author), Joshua Gans (Author), Avi Goldfarb (Author)
About the author
Ajay Agrawal is Professor of Strategic Management and Peter Munk Professor of Entrepreneurship at the University of Toronto's Rotman School of Management. He is also cofounder of The Next 36 and Next AI, cofounder of the AI/robotics company Kindred, and founder of the Creative Destruction Lab. Ajay conducts research on technology strategy, science policy, entrepreneurial finance, and the geography of innovation.
Joshua Gans is Professor of Strategic Management and the holder of the Jeffrey S. Skoll Chair of Technical Innovation and Entrepreneurship at Toronto's Rotman School of Management. Gans is a frequent contributor to outlets like the New York Times, Harvard Business Review, Forbes, Slate, and the Financial Times. Joshua also writes regularly at several blogs including Digitopoly.
Avi Goldfarb is the Ellison Professor of Marketing at Toronto's Rotman School of Management, University of Toronto. Avi is also Chief Data Scientist at the Creative Destruction Lab, Senior Editor at Marketing Science, a Fellow at Behavioral Economics in Action at Rotman, and a Research Associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research. His research has been widely covered in the popular press.
About this book
"What does AI mean for your business? Read this book to find out." -- Hal Varian, Chief Economist, Google
Artificial intelligence does the seemingly impossible, magically bringing machines to life--driving cars, trading stocks, and teaching children. But facing the sea change that AI will bring can be paralyzing. How should companies set strategies, governments design policies, and people plan their lives for a world so different from what we know? In the face of such uncertainty, many analysts either cower in fear or predict an impossibly sunny future.
But in Prediction Machines, three eminent economists recast the rise of AI as a drop in the cost of prediction. With this single, masterful stroke, they lift the curtain on the AI-is-magic hype and show how basic tools from economics provide clarity about the AI revolution and a basis for action by CEOs, managers, policy makers, investors, and entrepreneurs.
When AI is framed as cheap prediction, its extraordinary potential becomes clear:
- Prediction is at the heart of making decisions under uncertainty. Our businesses and personal lives are riddled with such decisions.
- Prediction tools increase productivity--operating machines, handling documents, communicating with customers.
- Uncertainty constrains strategy. Better prediction creates opportunities for new business structures and strategies to compete.
Table of contents
1. Introduction: Machine Intelligence
2. Cheap Changes Everything
Part One: Prediction
3. Prediction Machine Magic
4. Why It’s Called Intelligence
5. Data Is the New Oil
6. The New Division of Labor
Part Two: Decision Making
7. Unpacking Decisions
8. The Value of Judgment
9. Predicting Judgment
10. Taming Complexity
11. Fully Automated Decision Making
Part Three: Tools
12. Deconstructing Work Flows
13. Decomposing Decisions
14. Job Redesign
Part Four: Strategy
15. AI in the C-Suite
16. When AI Transforms Your Business
17. Your Learning Strategy
18. Managing AI Risk
Part Five: Society
19. Beyond Business
Length: 272 pages
Publisher: Harvard Business Review Press (April 17, 2018)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 1633695670
ISBN-13: 978-1633695672
Harvard__Prediction Machines_The Simple Economics of Artificial Intelligence.epub
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