EuropeA research report released by the ECB on Tuesday showed that during the rapid development of deep learning in the 2010s,Job opportunities for young people and high-skilled workers actually increased, not disappeared.
The study looked at the relationship between sex and gender in 16 European countries between 2011 and 2019. AI During this period, breakthroughs in areas such as language processing, image recognition, algorithm-based recommendations, and fraud detection have triggered a technological revolution that will only accelerate with the recent development of generative AI models like OpenAI’s ChatGPT.
Across the 16 European countries studied, the share of employment in sectors exposed to AI increased, with low-skill and medium-skill jobs largely unaffected and high-skill positions gaining ground.maximumpromote.
However, the researchers also found thatFor occupations more exposed to AI, wage growth has a “neutral to slightly negative impact”.
“These results do not mean that AI technologies are fully exonerated,” the report said. “AI-enabled technologies continue to be developed and adopted. Most of their effects on jobs and wages — and therefore on growth and equality — have yet to be seen.”
This finding contrasts with previous "technology waves," when computerization reduced the relative employment share of middle-skill workers, leading to "polarization."
While not conclusive, the research may offer hope to American workers who believe AI may one day replace humans in their professions.
A recent survey conducted by Spokeo found that despite seeing the potential benefits of AI, 1,027 respondents said they 66.61% of TP3T people agree that AI can perform their job duties, and 74.81% of TP3T people say they are concerned about the impact of this technology on the entire industry.
The survey also found that American workers are optimistic about what AI will mean for the future of work, with 78.11% saying they believe the technology can reduce some stress at work and 76.71% believing AI will reduce the number of days Americans work per week on average.
The vast majority of respondents, 79.1%, said they believe employers should provide training for ChatGPT and other AI tools..