2024-06-11 11:46:36
Essential for many sectors, artificial intelligence raises many questions, even concerns. Dedicated to these questions, the three episodes of this mini-series of the Cogitons Sciences podcast invite you to discover the promises and future developments of an intelligence that is certainly artificial, but now inseparable from our professional activities, associated with multiple sustainable, ethical or regulatory issues.
#1: A silent revolution that makes noise!
A tool for collaboration between man and machine, a source of time savings, cost savings as well as greater efficiency and skills development, AI allows the user to free themselves from time-consuming tasks as soon as they can be automated. However, its use must be done in compliance with ethics, but also environmental issues, and keeping in mind the risks of cyberattacks against which it is essential to protect oneself.
Frédéric Pascal, University Professor (Paris Saclay), Director of the DataIA Institute, and Marie-Aude Aufaure, Director of the Big Data and artificial intelligence consulting and training company Datarvest, discuss in this first episode how AI is revolutionizing work processes.
#2: reconciling sustainable uses and principles
AI is only truly useful if its use is also reasoned. Its integration therefore requires that the desired objectives be defined in advance, whether they are temporal, economic or an increased need for precision. Its contribution to users, in the medical field and particularly in radiology, must also be assessed in light of each stage of its life cycle, taking into account the principles of sustainable development, compliance with regulations and ethics to which any company is subject today.
In this second episode, Pierre Monget, program director at Hub France IA, and Paul Hérent, co-founder of Raidium, argue for the useful and reasoned use of AI in business.
#3: Can we innovate without going astray?
The European regulation on artificial intelligence (the AI Act) defines a certain number of risks induced by AI. It requires companies to question not only the consequences that the integration of AI will have in their businesses, but also the possible abuses of its use. The restrictive rules that are now imposed on it require questioning both the ethical and legal aspects, prior to the implementation of projects.
Jean-Gabriel Ganascia, computer scientist and philosopher specializing in artificial intelligence and ethics at Sorbonne University, member of the CNRS ethics committee, insists in this third episode on the need for ethical and regulated integration of AI.
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