Data Governance & Management
An algorithm for generating synthetic rare events of all types
An algorithm for generating synthetic rare events of all types
19 November 2019 Pascal Coggia, Artefact UK’s Managing Partner of Data and Consulting, explains how brands can use AI and data to forecast the popularity of their products and inform their marketing and operations.
Often perceived as a menace, AI can, on the contrary, enable the media to dedicate themselves to what comprises their true added value: investigation, perspective-taking, analysis…
Artefact UK’s VP of Data Ryo Katsuki sits down for a fireside discussion on the importance of incorporating AI into your business in 2020. He also advises on the most efficient way to do so.
Artefact’s three things to remember about the reality of AI:
The world is becoming ever more aware of AI’s potential. There is real momentum, evidenced by the race for global leadership in artificial intelligence.
With the cloud, users are offered abstract Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS*) rather than finite resources they can buy, known as on-premise infrastructure. The cloud can also offer an application (PaaS*: Platform as a Service) or a function (FaaS*: Function As A Service).
“Will machines replace humans?” The year was 1940, and Franklin D. Roosevelt, in a debate with the president of MIT, was worrying about the impact of machines on the unemployment rate. Sixteen years later, at the Dartmouth conference, Artificial Intelligence (AI) officially enters the pantheon of scientific disciplines.
Artefact has adapted Lean Manufacturing methodologies in order to remedy the seven sources of waste traditionally encountered in artificial intelligence projects.
