Dsmart’s AI Automation Risk Report analyzes 784 occupations to identify the 50 jobs most vulnerable to AI automation. Administrative, clerical, and data-processing roles face the highest exposure, ...
As artificial intelligence makes many tasks easier, the human work of cajoling, arm-twisting and reassuring appears to be rising in importance. Richard BorgeCredit... Supported by By Noam Scheiber Dan ...
In a new survey released Thursday, a nonprofit AI research center found that half of American adults used AI in the past week, either for personal or work use, with 20% of full-time workers saying ...
Matt Gardiner recently climbed a series of 90-foot grain bins to measure millions of bushels of corn. He and his team got so covered in thick dust that they had to be sprayed down with air hoses ...
“We need a Manhattan Project for this,” one economist says. This story originally appeared in The Algorithm, our weekly newsletter on AI. To get stories like this in your inbox first, sign up here.
If you follow the ongoing debate over AI’s growing economic impact, you may have seen the graphic below floating around this month. It comes from an Anthropic report on the labor market impacts of AI ...
Construction trades are riding the biggest building boom in decades, in part due to data center projects. But the artificial intelligence that the facilities power could upend the job market for ...
The flash from my iPhone camera illuminates my dirty socks and underwear as I hold each item up for the video recording to capture clearly. As I load my smelly clothes into the washer, I tremble a bit ...
It’s no secret that more and more professionals are growing anxious over AI. Reports continue to emerge about the technology threatening white-collar work. But the truth is, it’s hard to predict ...
A study finds that millions of workers in AI-exposed jobs could adapt, but about 6 million may struggle to find new work. Reading time 2 minutes No one really knows exactly how AI will reshape the job ...
I stopped scrolling when I saw this chart. I know what a real signal looks like buried inside a research report most people will never read. This one matters. Anthropic published a landmark study on ...
Peter Gratton, Ph.D., is a New Orleans-based editor and professor with over 20 years of experience in investing, economics, and public policy. Peter began covering markets at Multex (Reuters) and has ...