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Emerging From COVID: Stanford Conference will Focus on how AI can Aid Recovery | Stanford HAI
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Emerging From COVID: Stanford Conference will Focus on how AI can Aid Recovery

Date
May 20, 2020
Topics
Economy, Markets
Healthcare
REUTERS/Phil Noble

Experts will discuss vaccine development, the future of work, privacy and contact tracing, 2020 elections, and other major issues arising from this pandemic.

Months into the COVID-19 pandemic, shelter restrictions are beginning to lift and people are experimenting with a slow return to a new normal. While prospects for moving to a post-Covid-19 world remain highly uncertain, we are seeing major shifts in how we conduct business, resume education, interact socially, and think globally.

On June 1, the Stanford Institute for Human-Centered Artificial Intelligence (HAI) will bring together scholars and industry experts to discuss this future. What is the path ahead, economically, medically, and culturally?

Stanford HAI associate director Rob Reich, a professor of political science and the faculty director of the Stanford McCoy Family Center for Ethics in Society, explains what viewers can expect from this virtual conference.

What is the intent of COVID + AI: The Road Ahead?

This conference will discuss how to confront the coronavirus pandemic with an eye toward AI but also looking more broadly at the wide array of issues that HAI-affiliated scholars work on. That includes vaccine development and drug treatments for COVID-19, the role of automation in replacing or mitigating the risks of dangerous work performed by human labor, the economic implications of the pandemic, the ethical and social dimensions of pandemics, such as protecting individual privacy while pursuing contact tracing or combating the “infodemic” of online disinformation. There are so many different issues the pandemic raises as a society, and the human-centered approach is the right approach to take.

During HAI’s first COVID conference on April 1, we had just entered shelter-in-place restrictions in Northern California. We were just beginning to adjust to this profound disruption in every aspect of our lives. Now that we’ve reset our expectations and understand that living with COVID-19 will be here for the foreseeable future, we are looking for paths out of our current confinement. We need to begin to plan for a future in which every aspect of our lives has been up-ended, and we have to proactively seek to rebuild our economy, our health care system, our schools and universities, our workplaces, and our personal lives.

What will be some main themes?

There are extraordinary political implications that this conference will tackle, particularly what it means to conduct the November U.S. elections in a safe way. If there's a second wave of COVID-19 in the fall, we need to understand what the implications are for holding a healthy election and how to avoid, if possible, the spread of misinformation and disinformation about the coronavirus as part of the politics of the election. Now is the time to think through all these issues, not in September, not in October.

And more broadly than the election, there are profound geopolitical consequences: What will the world order look like when we emerge from the pandemic? There are questions about the EU, China, the United States, multilateral organizations like the World Health Organization, whether the global south will be as severely affected as the global north has been. These outstanding questions about politics are still on the horizon to be answered.

Who should attend this conference?

There’s going to be material that will be of interest to anyone and everyone, from information on the medical frontier to the economy, politics, and education. We’ll have three sessions: one on the economic road out of COVID, the medical road forward, and humanity’s road forward.

And the speakers aren’t pundits — this will not be an airing of opinions. They are speaking from the basis of their research in an attempt to inform the public, policymakers, and other leaders across industry, civil society, and government.

Can AI solve our post-COVID problems?

AI provides for extraordinary opportunities to accelerate solutions to problems when it’s harnessed to human interest and social benefits. But AI is not a magic dust you sprinkle on anything to make the world a better place.

Is there such a thing as a post-COVID world?

I think there is. Some people have referred to this pandemic as completely unanticipated, a shock from nowhere. But any student of history, or anyone who watched Bill Gates’s 2015 TED talk, knows that pandemics have happened in the past and the question is about our capacity to confront a biological phenomenon that has recurred over and over again. We all remember our lives before COVID-19 hit, and we thought to ourselves this seemed a remote possibility. Now I hope everyone has been reminded that these occur frequently across history and cause social disruptions and economic reorderings. Our task is to emerge from this pandemic with greater resilience, a stronger economy, and a rebuilt public health structure so when the next pandemic happens, we are better prepared.

Register for COVID + AI: The Road Ahead.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

REUTERS/Phil Noble
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