top of page
Search

2023 AI in Action Conference: How Is AI Transforming Jobs?

  • Writer: Caroline Warren
    Caroline Warren
  • Sep 18, 2024
  • 2 min read

Updated: Oct 17, 2024

How is AI being used by firms? What is the impact? What are the impediments to the use of AI? This second conference in our AI in Action Series addressed these questions and more, featuring experts from industry, academia and policy institutions.


Curious to see how AI is shaping the future? Dive into the individual sessions by clicking below!


Keynote Address: "AI and Exclusion: The Fragility of Prediction to Missing Data" by Professor Catherine Tucker, Sloan Distinguished Professor of Management Science and Professor of Marketing, MIT Sloan

Watch Here: Keynote Address by Catherine Tucker: AI in Action Conference 2023



Session A: AI and Healthcare with Marius Linguraru, Professor and Endowed Chair of Research and Innovation, Children’s National Hospital, Nawar SharaDirector, MedStar Health Research Institute, Nikhil Sahni, Partner, Healthcare, McKinsey and Company, and Catherine Tucker, Sloan Distinguished Professor of Management Science and Professor of Marketing, MIT Sloan



Session B: AI and Retail Services with Fabio Luzzi, Chief Data and Analytics Officer, Tapestry and Prakhar Mehrotra, Vice President of Machine Learning, Walmart 



Session C: AI and Advertising with Shervin Khodabandeh, Co-Lead, Boston Consulting Group's AI business in North America, Ness Shroff, Director, AI Edge Institute at Ohio State University, and Matthew Wilding, Co-Lead Digital & Artificial Intelligence Program, U.S. Steel 



Session D: Roundtable, How to measure AI diffusion, its impacts, and how policy can help with Carol Corrado, Distinguished Principal Research Fellow, Conference Board & Senior Policy Scholar at Georgetown University, Olivia Igbokwe-Curry, Head of US Congressional and Political Affairs, Amazon Web Services, Scott Wallsten, President and Senior Fellow, The Technology Policy Institute, and Nikolas Zolas, Senior Economist, Center for Economic Studies at the US Census Bureau


 
 
 

Comments


bottom of page