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Ipsos Update – July 2024
AI, Refugees, Crime … Ipsos Update explores the latest and research & thinking on key topics from Ipsos teams around the world.
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Two-thirds of small businesses say hiring employees with AI skills could save them money
The quarterly Ipsos/MetLife/U.S. Chamber of Commerce Small Business Index in Q2 2024 is up from Q1 2024
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Creativity
Business relies on creativity and innovation to serve customers and compete. Here’s how artificial intelligence is changing both ends of that equation.
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How the AI revolution will reshape the ways we create, work and play
Will AI empower artists, or lead us to a more derivative future? What’s certain is that it will change the ways people think, relate, and create, says What the Future editor Matt Carmichael.
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How AI could make platforms more inclusive for everyone
Artificial intelligence can help make everyone more creative and make online experiences more equitable — if we steer it in the right direction. Meta’s Victoria Ekwenuke explains how brands, platforms, and creators can drive that change.
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How AI and human insights can help designers think out of the box
People are still at the heart of product design. But new AI tools can generate ideas and extend the impact of human creativity, says Ipsos’ Alyson Heffernan.
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How AI will help tomorrow’s creators push artistic boundaries
When used with intention, AI can facilitate entirely new modes of creative expression. But that means developers should be listening to what artists want from these tools, says artist and RISD professor Daniel Lefcourt.
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Why AI shouldn’t be used as a shortcut for craftsmanship
Literature is at a crossroads — but it will remain a human endeavor, says Cheryl Lu-Lien Tan, the George R.R. Martin chair in storytelling at Northwestern University.
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How ‘generative reality’ will become a new art medium
From MOMA to the Sphere, Refik Anadol’s AI-powered art installations have engaged and inspired millions. Here’s how he sees the future of creativity.
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Why ideas matter more than how art is created
Stephanie Dinkins, an artist and professor at Stony Brook University, thinks AI is here to stay and that creators shouldn’t ignore the opportunities that AI presents.