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What brands should know about AI early adopters
Generative AI could transform the way brands do business. Ipsos has identified six unique user segments of AI from a survey of early adopters to understand what they want from these tools. Ipsos’ Kim Berndt explains.
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How AI will transform the patient journey
Generative AI tools are already transforming the online patient journey, says Ipsos’ Ashwin Balasubramanian. Here’s what healthcare brands and providers need to know about how AI influences patient decisions and behaviors.
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How AI will help people be more creative
Here’s why Adobe’s Chris Duffey thinks AI as a collaborator could take human creativity and productivity to new heights.
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AI’s future will hinge on the tension between wonder and worry
Is AI coming for our jobs or making them easier? The answer will depend on how brands, businesses and policymakers balance wonder and worry, says Ipsos’ Matt Carmichael.
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Why ethics should be at the center of new AI tech
Whether they’re building AI chatbots or experimental interfaces for people with neurological disorders, brands need to keep ethical considerations at the center of their work. Taryn Southern, chief storytelling officer for Blackrock Neurotech, explains how.
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Creating better AI-driven user experiences through transparency
Brands and businesses are rushing to bring AI-powered capabilities to market. But if they want to maintain peoples’ loyalty and engagement, they need to maintain transparency, says Ipsos’ Pip Mothersill.
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The future opportunity for AI is cross-cultural intelligence
To interrupt discriminatory or unethical practices in AI, brands will need to bring diverse and contextual qualitative data into their AI workflow, says Ipsos’ Janelle James.
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Future Jobs to Be Done – Intelligence
Whether people adopt AI tools will depend on whether they solve people’s problems. Trevor Sudano, a trends and foresight lead at Ipsos Strategy3, imagines one potential job for AI to solve for people.
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What it will take to help people trust AI for democracy
In a post-deepfake world, it can be hard to believe what you see. But AI tools also have the potential to shore up trust in institutions, says Ginny Badanes, senior director of the Democracy Forward initiative at Microsoft.
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How AI can reduce the friction in work and life
AI assistants may not solve every problem — but by reducing the friction of everyday tasks, they could transform work and life, says Salesforce’s Peter Schwartz.