The Future of AI Depends on High-School Girls
During her freshman year, Stephanie Tena, a 16-year-old programmer, was searching the internet for coding programs and came across a website for an organization called AI4All, which runs an artificial-intelligence summer camp for high-schoolers. On the site, a group of girls her age were gathered around an autonomous car in front of the iconic arches of Stanford's campus. "AI will change the world," the text read. "Who will change AI?" How technology and globalization are changing what it means to work Read more Tena thought maybe she could. She lives in a trailer park in California's Central Valley; her mom, a Mexican immigrant from Michoacán, picks strawberries in the nearby fields.
May-28-2018, 02:10:48 GMT
- Country:
- Asia > Pakistan (0.04)
- North America
- Canada (0.04)
- Mexico > Michoacán (0.24)
- United States
- Arizona (0.04)
- California
- Los Angeles County > Los Angeles (0.04)
- Santa Clara County > Palo Alto (0.04)
- Industry:
- Education > Educational Setting
- K-12 Education > Secondary School (0.54)
- Health & Medicine (0.95)
- Information Technology (1.00)
- Education > Educational Setting
- Technology: