Chatgpt's comment- I prompted for 100 wds insightful reply to ur post:
The "AI as judge, humans as jury" paradigm extends far beyond business use cases. In healthcare, AI might recommend diagnoses, but human doctors validate them. In education, AI can grade tests, yet teachers provide nuanced feedback. This hybrid model ensures ethical and accurate applications, especially as AI expands into sensitive fields like law and finance. Ultimately, human oversight anchors AI's potential for trust and precision.
My Comments (AI edited for grammar):
Thanks for sharing your insights. On a societal level, I’m noticing the term “AI-native” gaining traction among parents. The concept revolves around introducing AI tools to children for creating stories, illustrations, and more, fostering AI literacy.
I completely agree that the humans as jury concept will apply across industries. My thought is that human feedback will be a requirement for early adoption to ensure that AI is trustworthy and accurate.
I hadn’t thought about childhood AI literacy, but I think the same applies to anyone in the business world — if you’re not actively integrating AI into your daily workflows, you may fall behind in the long-run
Chatgpt's comment- I prompted for 100 wds insightful reply to ur post:
The "AI as judge, humans as jury" paradigm extends far beyond business use cases. In healthcare, AI might recommend diagnoses, but human doctors validate them. In education, AI can grade tests, yet teachers provide nuanced feedback. This hybrid model ensures ethical and accurate applications, especially as AI expands into sensitive fields like law and finance. Ultimately, human oversight anchors AI's potential for trust and precision.
My Comments (AI edited for grammar):
Thanks for sharing your insights. On a societal level, I’m noticing the term “AI-native” gaining traction among parents. The concept revolves around introducing AI tools to children for creating stories, illustrations, and more, fostering AI literacy.
I completely agree that the humans as jury concept will apply across industries. My thought is that human feedback will be a requirement for early adoption to ensure that AI is trustworthy and accurate.
I hadn’t thought about childhood AI literacy, but I think the same applies to anyone in the business world — if you’re not actively integrating AI into your daily workflows, you may fall behind in the long-run