Search Search Artificial Intelligence is set to shape our lives – and the economy – in 2017 As yet we don’t fully measure these changes that have taken place. If you are reading this on a Facebook feed, you are doing so because you have signalled that this is the sort of stuff you are interested in. Facebook has cleverly directed this to you Click to follow Independent Voices Google’s self-driving car may be for the few just now, but we are all benefiting from improvements in navigation Getty Will technology at last help us to feel richer in 2017? The prevailing concern for several years now has been that despite rising GDP most people are not feeling any richer, and some people attribute the success of populist politicians to this sense of resentment. That won’t go away in the coming year for sure. But we will hear a lot more about the clutch of technologies that potentially can transform our living standards, and accordingly give a practical response to populism by showing that things can and will get better. The core set of these technologies goes under the umbrella term Artificial Intelligence. The New York Times Magazine has just run a piece by Gideon Lewis-Kraus, under the title “The Great A. I. Awakening”, which sums up what is happening. It is largely about what Google is doing in this field, starting with the announcement in London of a much improved version of Google Translate. The improvement is largely down to the application machine learning, which is really a sub-section of AI, but a massively important one. Thanks to AI, the translation service is now much better, and able to produce good colloquial English – and other languages. Google Translate had been getting better, but apparently the overnight improvement resulting from the use of AI was equivalent to all the improvements over the previous four years. It seems that machines are better at learning from their mistakes than humans are. Inside Story - How can we make the most of artificial intelligence? There is a multitude of other ways in which AI will improve the quality of services. One of the more obvious is car navigation. Leave aside the whole self-driving car business, which may or may not transform the world. What is already happening is much better vehicle navigation. Remember all the stories about people slavishly following their satnav and ending up in a river? You hear a lot less of that now. Thanks partly to the huge increase of real-time information about traffic flows and partly to AI, navigation systems have become much better. This is not just about us avoiding motorway jams over the holidays; it is more about optimising delivery routes for goods and services. Another example is speech recognition, where machines are now close to the ability of human beings to understand what is being said. Combine that with machine translation and we are quite close to being able to talk in one language and the listener hear in another – a real version of the fictional babel fish of Douglas Adams’ Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy. There are a string of products that nearly do this, but I have been unable track down one that does so reliably and in real time. Wait a year or so, though, and the technology will be there. Still another – and slightly spooky – advance is in machine recruitment. Initial filtering of job applications in many companies is now done without a human being actually seeing them, and with only a minority being passed on for consideration. But humans are not good at hiring. If you could improve staff selection by looking at the performance of millions of job-seekers, rather than the quite small selection of the recruiters’ personal experience, then the benefit to employer and employee would be huge. Fewer bad appointments from the employer’s point of view; fewer poor career choices from the perspective of the job-seeker. UK news in pictures UK news in pictures League Two side Coventry City celebrate victory over Premier League side Stoke in the FA Cup third round PA A commendation ceremony takes place at Manchester Town Hall to recognise the actions of police and rail staff following the terrorist attack at Manchester Arena in May 2017 PA Stuart (no surname given) with his possessions in a bus stop near Windsor Castle, Berkshire. Prime Minister Theresa May has said she disagrees with Tory council leader Simon Dudley, who called on police to clear rough sleepers from Windsor before the royal wedding PA Storm Eleanor lashed the UK with violent storm-force winds of up to 100mph PA Members of National Union of Rail, Maritime and Transport (RMT) hold a demonstration against rail fare increases outside Kings Cross Railway Station, London. Average rail ticket prices across Britain have risen by 3. 4 percent, the biggest increase to rail fares for five years EPA A man takes part in the Mappleton Bridge Jump, an annual unofficial tradition where those willing jump from Okeover bridge on New Years Day into the River Dove PA Passing clouds creating beautiful colours in Wimbledon on the last sunset of the year Rex One person was taken to hospital after a fire broke out on the ninth floor of a building in Joiner Street in Manchester's Northern Quarter mcr_cabbie/Twitter Heavy snow, rain, thunderstorms and wind have caused disruption across much of Britain as a band of "severe" weather rolled across the country. Travelers were warned of dangerous roads conditions, with Highways England advising road users to pack shovels, food and water if they do venture out. The weather didn't just affect travel however, camels on a farm near Richmond, North Yorkshire and various other animals are having to deal with the cold weather PA Alastair Cook celebrates after reaching his double-century during the third day of the fourth Ashes cricket test match Reuters Sheep are driven to another field in the Cotswolds after overnight snow caused travel disruptions across parts of the UK PA Harry Kane celebrates after scoring his third goal, Tottenham's fifth, during the Boxing day Premier League match against Southampton at Wembley. He broke Alan Shearer’s record of 36 Premier League goals in a calendar year, scoring 39 from 36 matches. Kane also finished 2017 as Europe’s leading scorer ahead of Barcelona’s Lionel Messi, who has 54 goals from 63 appearances in all competitions. Harry Kane has 56 from 52. AFP/Getty Swimmers get out of the water after taking part in the Christmas Day Serpentine swim in Hyde Park, London Reuters Stuart Broad of England bowls during a nets session at the Melbourne Cricket Ground, Australia. The fourth Ashes test starts on Boxing Day Getty Staff members console each other as they survey the damage after a fire destroyed a number of buildings at London Zoo. An aardvark has died and four meerkats are missing. Eight zoo workers have been treated by paramedics after a desperate attempt to save the animals from the blaze, which broke out in a petting area. Druids, pagans and revellers gather in the centre of Stonehenge, hoping to see the sun rise, as they take part in a winter solstice ceremony at the ancient neolithic monument of Stonehenge. Despite a forecast for cloud and rain, a large crowd gathered at the famous historic stone circle, to celebrate the sunrise closest to the Winter Solstice, the shortest day of the year. The event is claimed to be more important in the pagan calendar than the summer solstice, because it marks the 're-birth' of the Sun for the New Year. Getty Images Polish Defense Minister Antoni Macierewicz, British Defence Minister Gavin Williamson in the presence of Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki and Britain's Prime Minister Theresa May sign a treaty between the Republic of Poland and the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland on cooperation in the field of defense and security EPA A protester wears a 'STOP BREXIT' hat outside the Palace of Westminster Reuters The Choristers of St Paul's rehearse for a series of services and concerts over the Christmas season at St Paul's Cathedral in London REUTERS Joe Root, the England captain is interviewed after Australia regained the Ashes. England lost by an innings and 41 run runs in the third test at the WACA in Perth Getty Photos of Richard Ratcliffe and his wife Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe, who has been jailed in Iran, on display at their home in north London. Mr Ratcliffe says he believes there is "still a chance" she may be released from an Iranian prison in time for a dream Christmas together. PA Oxford Street in London is filled with shoppers with 8 shopping days before Christmas Rex Jonny Bairstow of England headbutts his helmet to celebrate his century during day two of the Third Test match in the 2017/18 Ashes Series between Australia and England at the WACA in Perth, Australia. Bairstow was embroiled in controversy at the beginning of the tour after lightly headbutting Australian opening batsman Cameron Bancroft in an exchange in a bar People at the Grenfell Tower National Memorial Service PA Wax figures of Prime Minister Theresa May and Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson wearing a Christmas Jumper at Madame Tussauds EPA Victims and family of victims of the Grenfell Tower fire, Nicholas Burton (left), Sandra Ruiz (second right), Karim Mussilhy (right) and a girl who asked not be named (second left), hand in a petition to Downing Street, asking for an overhaul of the public inquiry. PA A homeless man on the streets of Manchester. Many people are spending the night on the streets in freezing temperatures as the Met Office continues to issue weather warnings across the country. The Shelter charity has said that more than 300,000 are now homeless across Britain, equating to the population of a city the size of Newcastle Getty Pedestrians walk over the Millennium Bridge with St Paul's Cathedral pictured in the background as snow falls AFP/Getty Images British Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson, left, and Secretary of Iran's Supreme National Security Council Ali Shamkhani, right, with interpreter at centre, during their meeting in Tehran, Iran. Johnson is expected to discuss the fate of detained British-Iranian woman Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe, who is serving a five-year prison sentence for allegedly plotting to overthrow Iran's government. AP British Prime Minister Theresa May (L) and European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker address a press conference at the European Commission in Brussels AFP/Getty Images Nick Dunn, one of the so-called Chennai Six is greeted by his sister Lisa as he arrives at Newcastle Airport after being released from India after serving four years in jail on weapons charges. PA Britain's Queen Elizabeth II (L) greets Nigeria's ambassador to the United Kingdom, George Adesola Oguntade (C), and his wife, Modupe Oguntade, during a private audience at Buckingham Palace in central London AFP/Getty 800 abandoned buckets appear at Potters Field Park, London, in a moving tribute to the 800 children who die every day, on average, due to a lack of clean water and sanitation. Just one bucket in the almost enough safe drinking water for one child for a week. Every matched by the UK Government. WaterAid / Ollie Dixon British Prime Minister Theresa May smiles to European Union President Donald Tusk as she attends Brexit negotiations' meetings AFP/Getty The last Supermoon of 2017 sets over Whitley Bay, Northumberland PA The crowd reacts as England's Dawid Malan fails to stop a boundary during the first day of the second Ashes test match REUTERS England manager, Gareth Southgate, jokes with Belgium manager, Roberto Martinez, after their sides were drawn in the same group during the Final Draw for the 2018 FIFA World Cup in Russia Getty Images A supporter of Lauri Love, who is accused of hacking into U. S. government computers, wears a Donald Trump mask as he protests in front of the Royal Courts of Justice in London AP A sign reading 'We want our future back' is displayed in front of Westminster during an Anti-Brexit Demonstration Rex Features shaped from a cloud of floating words, contributed by visitors, and is created by leading stage and performance designer Es Devlin. Rex Features My point here is that we are in the early stages of a revolution that will make the world economy much more efficient. It has been dubbed the Fourth Industrial Revolution, the first at the beginning of the 19th century being driven by steam (railways, textile factories, etc), the second at the end of that century by electricity (cars, telephone, consumer durables), and the third from the 1960s on by computers (payment systems, information). As yet we don’t fully measure these changes that have taken place. If you are reading this on a Facebook feed, you are doing so because you have signalled that this is the sort of stuff you are interested in. Facebook has cleverly directed this to you. It has done work that you would otherwise have had to do for yourself, rather as your smartphone does the work of looking up the best way to get across town. But time saved is not fully caught in calculations of GDP. We are getting (a bit) richer, but we don’t know it. My guess is that as we move into 2017 the hottest issue won’t be politics; it will be technology. The contribution of technology is not all positive. Do you want to join the gig economy? Do you want to be interviewed by an algorithm? But if a computer can diagnose an illness better than a doctor, bring it on. So on balance what is happening will make for better lifestyles, whether or not it appears as such in GDP. Comments Most Popular Sponsored Features Video We use cookies to enhance your visit to our site and to bring you advertisements that might interest you. Read our Privacy and Cookie Policies to find out more. We've noticed that you are using an ad blocker. Advertising helps fund our journalism and keep it truly independent. It helps to build our international editorial team, from war correspondents to investigative reporters, commentators to critics. 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