Case Based Reasoning
AI takes to the sky with IBM Watson - Computer Business Review
AI taken to another level as IBM Watson analysis data in the sky. IBM is taking to the skies with its latest Watson deployment, with Korean Air using the AI tech to help crews on the ground with aircraft maintenance. Using machine learning, Korean Air wants to increase the safety of their planes by taking advantage of the data collection, analytical ability and AI capabilities of IBM's Watson. IBM's Watson will do this by collating data from technical guidelines, inventory and in-flight incident history to analyse a current or potential future problem. In doing so, it will help to identify the cause of these problems and quickly offer an effective solution.
IBM Watson Partners With MAQS, Lindahl VQ to Build Legal AI Tool
IBM Watson has partnered with two of Sweden's leading law firms, MAQS and Lindahl, as well as legal knowledge management consultancy, VQ, to build an AI-driven contract review and advice system. The new AI tool, which is called True Agreement, is at present focused on Swedish shareholder agreements and has been trained to identify the type of document, find key clauses and then provide advice on aspects of those clauses as they are surfaced by IBM Watson's natural language processing capability. The new venture was revealed at the VQ forum event in Stockholm, yesterday and is the first joint venture legal AI project of its kind in Scandinavia. Also, MAQS revealed that it is now working with UK legal AI company, Luminance, becoming one of several law firms in the region now making use of the due diligence-focused AI company's platform. MAQS Knowledge Manager, Hans Hedkvist told Artificial Lawyer: 'The idea came about jointly between myself, the head of IT at Lindahl and Helena Hallgarn of VQ.' 'We saw that AI was coming and we wanted to do something in Swedish.
IBM Watson Care Manager helps court better serve youth
Note: This is part one of a two-part series on IBM Watson Care Manager for specialty courts. Our goal at the Juvenile Court of Montgomery County, Ohio, is to keep kids alive until they're old enough to make decisions on their own. We feel as if almost every child is directly or indirectly at risk today because of drugs, abuse and other issues. When we can't rely on the family to take care of them, it's our role to become like a surrogate parent. We give them a chance to survive until they're an adult and able to make it on their own.
IBM Watson: The Big Bet On IoT And AI
The Internet of Things is about connections and the massive amounts of data that result from those connections. Trouble is, most of the resulting data is not tapped, and that's where IBM and its AI mega-machine Watson come in. During a break in the IBM Genius of Things summit in Boston this week, I sat down with Harriet Green, general manager of Watson IoT and customer engagement and education at IBM, to discuss IBM's IoT and AI strategy. Green sees a market need as an opportunity, noting that 80% of the world's data is not yet searchable. "We've made a big bet ($3 billion) on IoT and bringing AI capabilities to IoT," says Green. "We're seeing this huge drive to connect the world's devices to, in our case, the IBM cloud, the IoT platform. People are understanding that if you connect things to things and things to people, the data flows and the opportunities are very real. "Secondly, we're seeing that the software application to gather this data and apply analytics to it are becoming deeper and richer.
IBM Watson and Autodesk reinvent customer service
Every year, companies spend 1.3 trillion dollars on 265 billion customer service calls. On average, the cost to find and hire a call center agent costs $4000 (not including salary), with an additional $4,800 for training -- and with frustrated agents tending to drop like flies in the face of an often brutally stressful job, these costs mount up. AI, or what IBM calls cognitive computing, is changing that. Autodesk began piloting the IBM Watson Conversation Service in June 2016 as a virtual agent called OTTO, later enhancing it and renaming it AVA (Autodesk Virtual Agent) in February 2017. The return on investment has been tremendous, says Rob High, IBM vice president and Watson chief technology officer and one of the featured speakers at VB Summit coming up on October 23 and 25 in Berkeley, CA.
As Hollywood taps into A.I., what will you build with IBM Watson? - Watson
Hollywood is beginning to recast artificial intelligence from being the lead character in movies to becoming the leading technology driving the industry. Producers and directors alike are discovering the power of a new kind of AI assistant: IBM Watson, the cognitive computing system that is enhancing the work of the human imagination and giving artists, filmmakers, and other creative minds the tools to uncover new ways of thinking and problem-solving. Imagine the ultimate "super-assistant" on the set to help make hundreds of decisions and take care of mundane tasks that free you up to concentrate on making the picture a box office success. IBM Watson can do this by pushing the boundaries of what producers and directors can create on the silver screen. It can analyze volumes of data -- think photos, online content, scripts, video -- and then recognize, inform and project from the patterns it identifies.
IBM's Watson is key to new artificial intelligence-powered ETF
As if active portfolio managers didn't have enough challenges from computer-driven passive investing strategies, now machines are directly horning in on their territory. San Francisco-based EquBot LLC is launching the first ever exchange-traded fund to use artificial intelligence, according to a company statement on Tuesday. Employing International Business Machines Corp.'s Watson platform, the AI Powered Equity ETF, ticker AIEQ, will attempt to mimic an army of equity research analysts working around the clock, according to Art Amador, co-founder of EquBot. "There has been an explosion of information," Amador said by phone. "AI provides a more informed way of investing."