Remove 2019 Remove Data Collection Remove Experimentation Remove Statistics
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What you need to know about product management for AI

O'Reilly on Data

All you need to know for now is that machine learning uses statistical techniques to give computer systems the ability to “learn” by being trained on existing data. After training, the system can make predictions (or deliver other results) based on data it hasn’t seen before. Machine learning adds uncertainty.

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Themes and Conferences per Pacoid, Episode 9

Domino Data Lab

The lens of reductionism and an overemphasis on engineering becomes an Achilles heel for data science work. Instead, consider a “full stack” tracing from the point of data collection all the way out through inference. Use of influence functions goes back to the 1970s in robust statistics. That seems much more robust.

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AI adoption in the enterprise 2020

O'Reilly on Data

The new survey, which ran for a few weeks in December 2019, generated an enthusiastic 1,388 responses. This year, about 15% of respondent organizations are not doing anything with AI, down ~20% from our 2019 survey. It seems as if the experimental AI projects of 2019 have borne fruit. But what kind?