"Knowledge workers" could be the most impacted by future automation

#artificialintelligence 

The robot revolution has long been thought of as apocalyptic for blue-collar workers whose tasks are manual and repetitive. A widely cited 2017 McKinsey study said 50 percent of work activities were already automatable using current technology and those activities were most prevalent in manufacturing. New data suggests white-collar workers -- even those whose work presumes more analytic thinking, higher paychecks, and relative job security -- may not be safe from the relentless drumbeat of automation. That's because artificial intelligence -- powerful computer tech like machine learning that can make human-like decisions and use real-time data to learn and improve -- has white-collar work in its sights, according to a new study by Stanford University economist Michael Webb and published by Brookings Institution. The scope of jobs potentially impacted by AI reaches far beyond white-collar jobs like telemarketing, a field that has already been decimated by bots, into jobs previously thought to be squarely in the province of humans: knowledge workers like chemical engineers, physicists, and market-research analysts.

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