Duh It turns out that AI Can Damage Human Intellect, Here’s the Explanation According to Experts!
Recently there has been a lot of talk about the application of Artificial Intelligence (AI) or artificial intelligence in the world of work. Launching from the Tech Target page, AI is the simulation of human intelligence processes by machines, especially computer systems. Specific applications of AI include expert systems, natural language processing, speech recognition, and machine vision.
So, is it possible that the presence of AI can make humans smarter?
The presence of artificial intelligence (AI) does not necessarily make humans smarter. Some experts say, AI will only make humans think faster but not necessarily accurate.
In a book entitled “I, Human – AI, Automation, and the Quest to Reclaim What Makes Us Unique,” professor of business psychology and Chief Innovation Officer at ManpowerGroup Tomas Chamorro-Premuzic says the AI era requires our brains to always be alert to small changes and react quickly, optimizing for speed over accuracy.
Illustration/Photo: freepik
The behavioral economist (behavioral economist) refers to this phenomenon as System 1 mode or a mode when humans make decisions that are impulsive, intuitive, automatic, and unconscious. As a result, humans turn out to be impatient.
Reacting quickly or trusting intuition is not something bad. Problems arise when impatience becomes the main way of making decisions.
Quoted from Engadget, it causes us to make mistakes and damages our ability to detect those mistakes.
Tomas says intuition can be helpful, but it has to be hard earned. For example, experts can think quickly because they have invested thousands of hours studying and practicing. As a result, their intuition has been driven by data.
Thus they can act quickly according to their internalized expertise and evidence-based experience. Unfortunately, most people are not experts even though they often think they are.
Most of us, especially when interacting with others on Twitter, act with the speed, decisiveness, and conviction of an expert, offering a wide variety of opinions on epidemiology and global crises, without the substance of knowledge to back them up.
The presence of AI can make our message conveyed to the audience more easily thanks to the information it provides. Unfortunately, AI can be wrong, and our limited knowledge can confirm this information.
Read more here, Beauties.
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(raf/raf)