Experts Doubt Ethical AI Design Will Be Broadly Adopted As the Norm Within the Next Decade

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Experts Doubt Ethical AI Design Will Be Broadly Adopted As the Norm Within the Next Decade FOR RELEASE June 16, 2021 Experts Doubt Ethical AI Design Will Be Broadly Adopted as the Norm Within the Next Decade A majority worries that the evolution of artificial intelligence by 2030 will continue to be primarily focused on optimizing profits and social control. They also cite the difficulty of achieving consensus about ethics. Many who expect progress say it is not likely within the next decade. Still, a portion celebrate coming AI breakthroughs that will improve life BY Lee Rainie, Janna Anderson and Emily A. Vogels FOR MEDIA OR OTHER INQUIRIES: Lee Rainie, Director, Internet and Technology Research Janna Anderson, Director, Elon University’s Imagining the Internet Center Haley Nolan, Communications Associate 202.419.4372 www.pewresearch.org RECOMMENDED CITATION Pew Research Center, June 16, 2021. “Experts Doubt Ethical AI Design Will Be Broadly Adopted as the Norm in the Next Decade” 1 PEW RESEARCH CENTER About Pew Research Center Pew Research Center is a nonpartisan fact tank that informs the public about the issues, attitudes and trends shaping America and the world. It does not take policy positions. It conducts public opinion polling, demographic research, content analysis and other data-driven social science research. The Center studies U.S. politics and policy; journalism and media; internet, science and technology; religion and public life; Hispanic trends; global attitudes and trends; and U.S. social and demographic trends. All of the center’s reports are available at www.pewresearch.org. Pew Research Center is a subsidiary of The Pew Charitable Trusts, its primary funder. For this project, Pew Research Center worked with Elon University’s Imagining the Internet Center, which helped conceive the research and collect and analyze the data. © Pew Research Center 2021 www.pewresearch.org 2 PEW RESEARCH CENTER How we did this This is the 12th “Future of the Internet” canvassing Pew Research Center and Elon University’s Imagining the Internet Center have conducted together to get expert views about important digital issues. In this case, the questions focused on the prospects for ethical artificial intelligence (AI) by the year 2030. This is a nonscientific canvassing based on a nonrandom sample; this broad array of opinions about where current trends may lead in the next decade represents only the points of view of the individuals who responded to the queries. Pew Research and Elon’s Imagining the Internet Center built a database of experts to canvass from a wide range of fields, choosing to invite people from several sectors, including professionals and policy people based in government bodies, nonprofits and foundations, technology businesses, think tanks and in networks of interested academics and technology innovators. The predictions reported here came in response to a set of questions in an online canvassing conducted between June 30 and July 27, 2020. In all, 602 technology innovators and developers, business and policy leaders, researchers and activists responded to at least one of the questions covered in this report. More on the methodology underlying this canvassing and the participants can be found in the final section. www.pewresearch.org 3 PEW RESEARCH CENTER Experts Doubt Ethical AI Design Will Be Broadly Adopted as the Norm Within the Next Decade A majority worries that the evolution of artificial intelligence by 2030 will continue to be primarily focused on optimizing profits and social control. They also cite the difficulty of achieving consensus about ethics. Many who expect progress say it is not likely within the next decade. Still, a portion celebrate coming AI breakthroughs that will improve life Artificial intelligence systems “understand” and shape a lot of what happens in people’s lives. AI applications “speak” to people and answer questions when the name of a digital voice assistant is called out. They run the chatbots that handle customer-service issues people have with companies. They help diagnose cancer and other medical conditions. They scour the use of credit cards for signs of fraud, and they determine who could be a credit risk. They help people drive from point A to point B and update traffic information to shorten travel times. They are the operating system of driverless vehicles. They sift applications to make recommendations about job candidates. They determine the material that is offered up in people’s newsfeeds and video choices. They recognize people’s faces, translate languages and suggest how to complete people’s sentences or search queries. They can “read” people’s emotions. They beat them at sophisticated games. They write news stories, paint in the style of Vincent Van Gogh and create music that sounds quite like the Beatles and Bach. Corporations and governments are charging evermore expansively into AI development. Increasingly, nonprogrammers can set up off-the-shelf, pre-built AI tools as they prefer. As this unfolds, a number of experts and advocates around the world have become worried about the long-term impact and implications of AI applications. They have concerns about how advances in AI will affect what it means to be human, to be productive and to exercise free will. Dozens of convenings and study groups have issued papers proposing what the tenets of ethical AI design should be, and government working teams have tried to address these issues. In light of this, Pew Research Center and Elon University’s Imagining the Internet Center asked experts where they thought efforts aimed at creating ethical artificial intelligence would stand in the year 2030. Some 602 technology innovators, developers, business and policy leaders, researchers and activists responded to this specific question: www.pewresearch.org 4 PEW RESEARCH CENTER By 2030, will most of the AI systems being used by organizations of all sorts employ ethical principles focused primarily on the public good? In response, 68% chose the option declaring that ethical principles focused primarily on the public good will not be employed in most AI systems by 2030; 32% chose the option positing that ethical principles focused primarily on the public good will be employed in most AI systems by 2030. This is a nonscientific canvassing, based on a nonrandom sample. The results represent only the opinions of the individuals who responded to the queries and are not projectable to any other population. The bulk of this report covers these experts’ written answers explaining their responses. They sounded many broad themes about the ways in which individuals and groups are accommodating to adjusting to AI systems. It is important to note that the responses were gathered in the summer of 2020 in a different cultural context amid the pandemic, before COVID-19 vaccines had been approved, at a time when racial justice issues were particularly prominent in the U.S. and before the conclusion of the U.S. presidential election. In addition, these responses came prior to the most recent studies aimed at addressing issues in ethical AI design and development. For instance, in early 2021 the Stanford Institute for Human-Centered Artificial Intelligence released an updated AI Index Report, the IEEE deepened its focus on setting standards for AI systems and the U.S. National Security Commission on AI, headed by tech leaders including Eric Schmidt, Andy Jassy, Eric Horvitz, Katharina McFarland and Robert Work, released its massive report on accelerating innovation while defending against malign uses of AI. The key themes these experts voiced in the written elaborations explaining their choices are outlined in the accompanying tables. Worries: The main developers and deployers of AI are focused on profit-seeking and social control, and there is no consensus about what ethical AI would look like Even as global attention turns to the purpose and impact of artificial intelligence (AI), many experts worry that ethical behaviors and outcomes are hard to define, implement and enforce. They point out that the AI ecosystem is dominated by competing businesses seeking to maximize profits and by governments seeking to surveil and control their populations. www.pewresearch.org 5 PEW RESEARCH CENTER • It is difficult to define “ethical” AI: Context matters. There are cultural differences, and the nature and power of the actors in any given scenario are crucial. Norms and standards are currently under discussion, but global consensus may not be likely. In addition, formal ethics training and emphasis is not embedded in the human systems creating AI. • Control of AI is concentrated in the hands of powerful companies and governments driven by motives other than ethical concerns: Over the next decade, AI development will continue to be aimed at finding ever-more- sophisticated ways to exert influence over people’s emotions and beliefs in order to convince them to buy goods, services and ideas. • The AI genie is already out of the bottle, abuses are already occurring, and some are not very visible and hard to remedy: AI applications are already at work in “black box” systems that are opaque at best and, at worst, impossible to dissect. How can ethical standards be applied under these conditions? While history has shown that when abuses arise as new tools are introduced societies always adjust and work to find remedies, this time it’s different. AI is a major threat. • Global competition, especially between China and the U.S., will matter more to the development of AI than any ethical issues: There is an arms race between the two tech superpowers that overshadows concerns about ethics. Plus, the two countries define ethics in different ways. The acquisition of techno-power is the real impetus for advancing AI systems. Ethics takes a back seat. Source: Nonscientific canvassing of select experts conducted June 30-July 27, 2020. “Experts Doubt Ethical AI Design Will Be Broadly Adopted as the Norm in the Next Decade” PEW RESEARCH CENTER and ELON UNIVERSITY’S IMAGINING THE INTERNET CENTER, 2021 Hopes: Progress is being made as AI spreads and shows its value; societies have always found ways to mitigate the problems arising from technological evolution Artificial intelligence (AI) applications are already doing amazing things.
Recommended publications
  • Appendix B: Religious Demography of Sub-Saharan Africa
    Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life / Islam and Christianity in Sub-Saharan Africa Appendix B: Religious Demography of Sub-Saharan Africa This appendix provides statistical estimates for the distribution of Christians, Muslims and other religious groups in the 19 countries surveyed by the Pew Research Center’s Forum on Religion & Public Life. In addition to the Pew Forum’s 2009 data, results are shown from national censuses, demographic and health surveys, and other general population surveys. Sources National censuses are the best starting point for the distribution of religious adherents because they generally cover the entire population. Some censuses, such as South Africa’s, even provide layers of detail under the major religious traditions. Censuses, however, can be affected by methodological decisions, political bias and social concerns that affect how the data are managed and whether respondents feel free to be truthful. In the absence of reliable census data on religion, Demographic and Health Surveys (DHS)1 provide nationally representative data on religion that is highly regarded by experts. The DHS usually sample at least 7,000 households and are often repeated at multiple time points. The DHS generally survey people ages 15 to 49 and oversample (and sometimes only sample) women. This is a limitation, since religious adherence differs, albeit slightly, by sex and age. General population surveys such as those by the Pew Global Attitudes Project and Afrobarometer also provide valuable information on the percentage of the population belonging to major religious groups.2 Because general population surveys typically involve 1,000 to 2,000 respondents, however, they cannot provide accurate detail on the size of small religious groups.
    [Show full text]
  • A Philosophical Analysis of Causality in Econometrics
    A Philosophical Analysis of Causality in Econometrics Damien James Fennell London School of Economics and Political Science Thesis submitted to the University of London for the completion of the degree of a Doctor of Philosophy August 2005 1 UMI Number: U209675 All rights reserved INFORMATION TO ALL USERS The quality of this reproduction is dependent upon the quality of the copy submitted. In the unlikely event that the author did not send a complete manuscript and there are missing pages, these will be noted. Also, if material had to be removed, a note will indicate the deletion. Dissertation Publishing UMI U209675 Published by ProQuest LLC 2014. Copyright in the Dissertation held by the Author. Microform Edition © ProQuest LLC. All rights reserved. This work is protected against unauthorized copying under Title 17, United States Code. ProQuest LLC 789 East Eisenhower Parkway P.O. Box 1346 Ann Arbor, Ml 48106-1346 Abstract This thesis makes explicit, develops and critically discusses a concept of causality that is assumed in structural models in econometrics. The thesis begins with a development of Herbert Simon’s (1953) treatment of causal order for linear deterministic, simultaneous systems of equations to provide a fully explicit mechanistic interpretation for these systems. Doing this allows important properties of the assumed causal reading to be discussed including: the invariance of mechanisms to intervention and the role of independence in interventions. This work is then extended to basic structural models actually used in econometrics, linear models with errors-in-the-equations. This part of the thesis provides a discussion of how error terms are to be interpreted and sets out a way to introduce probabilistic concepts into the mechanistic interpretation set out earlier.
    [Show full text]
  • U.S. Image Plummets Internationally As Most Say Country Has Handled Coronavirus Badly Ratings for Trump Remain Poor
    FOR RELEASE SEPTEMBER 15, 2020 U.S. Image Plummets Internationally as Most Say Country Has Handled Coronavirus Badly Ratings for Trump remain poor BY Richard Wike, Janell Fetterolf and Mara Mordecai FOR MEDIA OR OTHER INQUIRIES: Richard Wike, Director, Global Attitudes Research Stefan S. Cornibert, Communications Manager 202.419.4372 www.pewresearch.org RECOMMENDED CITATION Pew Research Center, September, 2020, “U.S. Image Plummets Internationally as Most Say Country Has Handled Coronavirus Badly” 1 PEW RESEARCH CENTER About Pew Research Center Pew Research Center is a nonpartisan fact tank that informs the public about the issues, attitudes and trends shaping America and the world. It does not take policy positions. The Center conducts public opinion polling, demographic research, content analysis and other data-driven social science research. It studies U.S. politics and policy; journalism and media; internet, science and technology; religion and public life; Hispanic trends; global attitudes and trends; and U.S. social and demographic trends. All of the Center’s reports are available at www.pewresearch.org. Pew Research Center is a subsidiary of The Pew Charitable Trusts, its primary funder. © Pew Research Center 2020 www.pewresearch.org 2 PEW RESEARCH CENTER How we did this This analysis focuses on public opinion of the United States in 13 countries in North America, Europe and the Asia-Pacific region. Views of the U.S. and its president are examined in the context of long-term trend data. The report also examines how people in other countries perceive America’s handling of the coronavirus outbreak and how those perceptions compare to ratings for their own country, the World Health Organization, the European Union and China.
    [Show full text]
  • ABSTRACT CAUSAL PROGRAMMING Joshua Brulé
    ABSTRACT Title of dissertation: CAUSAL PROGRAMMING Joshua Brul´e Doctor of Philosophy, 2019 Dissertation directed by: Professor James A. Reggia Department of Computer Science Causality is central to scientific inquiry. There is broad agreement on the meaning of causal statements, such as \Smoking causes cancer", or, \Applying pesticides affects crop yields". However, formalizing the intuition underlying such statements and conducting rigorous inference is difficult in practice. Accordingly, the overall goal of this dissertation is to reduce the difficulty of, and ambiguity in, causal modeling and inference. In other words, the goal is to make it easy for researchers to state precise causal assumptions, understand what they represent, understand why they are necessary, and to yield precise causal conclusions with minimal difficulty. Using the framework of structural causal models, I introduce a causation coeffi- cient as an analogue of the correlation coefficient, analyze its properties, and create a taxonomy of correlation/causation relationships. Analyzing these relationships provides insight into why correlation and causation are often conflated in practice, as well as a principled argument as to why formal causal analysis is necessary. Next, I introduce a theory of causal programming that unifies a large number of previ- ously separate problems in causal modeling and inference. I describe the use and implementation of a causal programming language as an embedded, domain-specific language called `Whittemore'. Whittemore permits rigorously identifying and esti- mating interventional queries without requiring the user to understand the details of the underlying inference algorithms. Finally, I analyze the computational com- plexity in determining the equilibrium distribution of cyclic causal models.
    [Show full text]
  • Powering Inclusion: Artificial Intelligence and Assistive Technology
    POLICY BRIEF MARCH 2021 Powering Inclusion: Artificial Intelligence and Assistive Technology Assistive technology (AT) is broadly defined as any equipment, product or service that can make society more inclusive. Eye- glasses, hearing aids, wheelchairs or even some mobile applica- tions are all examples of AT. This briefing explores the power of Key facts using Artificial Intelligence (AI) to enhance the design of current and future AT, as well as to increase its reach. The UN Convention on the Context Rights of Persons with Dis- Globally, over 1 billion people are currently in need of AT. Lack of access to basic AT excludes individuals, reduces their ability to live independent abilities (UNCRPD) estab- lives [3], and is a barrier to the realisation of the Sustainable Development lished AT provision as a Goals (SDGs) [2]. human right [1]. Advances in AI offer the potential to develop and enhance AT and gain new insights into the scale and nature of AT needs (although the risks of potential bias and discrimination in certain AI-based tools must also be Over 1 billion people are acknowledged). In June 2019, the Conference of State Parties to the UN currently in need of AT. Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD) recognized that AI has the potential to enhance inclu- By 2050, this number is sion, participation, and independence for people with disabilities [5]. AI- predicted to double [2]. enabled tools – such as predictive text, visual recognition, automatic speech- to-text transcription, speech recognition, and virtual assistants - have experi- enced great advances in the last few years and are already being Only 10% of those who used by people with vision, hearing, mobility and learning impairments.
    [Show full text]
  • PATHWAYS to OPEN ACCESS University of California Libraries
    University of Nebraska - Lincoln DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln Copyright, Fair Use, Scholarly Communication, etc. Libraries at University of Nebraska-Lincoln 2-27-2018 PATHWAYS TO OPEN ACCESS University of California Libraries Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/scholcom Part of the Intellectual Property Law Commons, Scholarly Communication Commons, and the Scholarly Publishing Commons University of California Libraries, "PATHWAYS TO OPEN ACCESS" (2018). Copyright, Fair Use, Scholarly Communication, etc.. 74. https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/scholcom/74 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Libraries at University of Nebraska-Lincoln at DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln. It has been accepted for inclusion in Copyright, Fair Use, Scholarly Communication, etc. by an authorized administrator of DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln. PATHWAYS TO OPEN ACCESS Approved 27 February 2018 Prepared by the University of California Libraries PATHWAYS TO OPEN ACCESS Table of Contents Introduction 1 Definitions 1 Approaches & Strategies 2 Green OA 2 Gold OA, APC-based 12 Gold OA, Non-APC Funded 23 Universal Strategies 28 Possible Next Steps 35 Green OA 35 Gold OA, APC-based 36 Gold OA, Non-APC-based 37 Universal Strategies 38 Selected Bibliography 40 INTRODUCTION Pursuant to the University of California (UC) Council of University Librarian’s (CoUL)1 3 August 2017 charge, this Pathways to OA Working Group2 has identified the current universe of Open Access (OA) approaches, and has analyzed the suite of strategies available for effectuating those approaches. Each approach described within this Pathways document offers unique and, in some cases, overlapping challenges, opportunities, and room for experimentation.
    [Show full text]
  • Introduction Land Reform in Post-Communist Europe
    Cambridge University Press 978-0-521-87938-5 - The Post-Soviet Potemkin Village: Politics and Property Rights in the Black Earth Jessica Allina-Pisano Excerpt More information Introduction Land Reform in Post-Communist Europe In December 1991, as the flag of the Soviet Union flew its last days over the Kremlin, a small crowd armed with crutches and wheelchair wheels stormed the regional state administration building in an eastern Ukrainian city. The city, Kharkiv, lies fifty miles from the Russian border.1 The protesters were a group of senior citizens and disabled people from the Saltivka housing development in Moskovsky district, an area of the city named for its location on the road to the Soviet metropolis. The group had gathered to demand land for garden plots. The protesters had specific land in mind. The land lay at the eastern edge of the city, bordering the Saltivka housing development to the west and the fields of one of the most successful agricultural collectives in the region to the east. That farm, named Ukrainka, was among the biggest dairy producers in the area. Food supplies in city markets, however, had become unpredictable and expensive. Residents of Saltivka wanted land to grow produce for themselves and their families. In response, the Kharkiv district executive committee ordered that Ukrainka relinquish nearly 300 hectares of land for garden plots, in addition to 75 hectares already alienated for that purpose the previous spring. Members of the Ukrainka collective objected to the proposed plan, 1 This account is based on a series of newspaper articles about the incident in a Kharkiv regional paper: M.
    [Show full text]
  • ILCL-ILSL MONTHLY Economy and Market Review
    April 2014 ILCL-ILSL MONTHLY Economy and Market Review YOUR MONEY MANAGER www.il-capital.com www.ilslbd.com IL Capital Limited and International Leasing Securities Limited are subsidiaries of International Leasing and Financial Services Limited Addressing Your Financial Concerns In today’s competitive world, each of you is looking for growth opportunities. While some of you are considering expansion of your existing business, others are looking for expansion in a new field. Some may feel that working capital management is the priority while others need to focus on financial efficiency. Many have suffered from high interest burden in the past while others are looking for scope to minimize tax burden to safeguard a substantial profit. Few need hands-on assistance to explore business opportunities with major industry players while others require a strategic plan to make an acquisition successful. Yes, we are talking about financial restructuring and investment alternatives. And a lot of questions come and wait in mind. Which type of financing is the best solution? Is it going to fit the long term strategy of the organization? Is it sustain- able? Are you ready for this? Faced with such dilemmas, what you need is an expert who can offer a wide array of financial services and benefits with comparative analyses of feasible alternatives. Yes. IL Capital can do this for you. We oer – • Issue Management & Underwriting • Loan Syndication & Private Equity • Merger & Acquisition • Advisory Services for any other Financial Restructuring requirement that our clients may have Realizing Your Investment Dream We are offering investment management solutions to both individuals and corporate entities.
    [Show full text]
  • Course Curriculum of Ph.D. Programme Agriculture/Horticulture
    Course Curriculum of Ph.D. Programme Agriculture/Horticulture * Agronomy * Agricultural Economics * Entomology * Extension Education * Plant Breeding & Genetics * Plant Pathology * Soil Science & Agricultural Chemistry * Horticulture – Fruit Science * Horticulture – Vegetable Science Rajmata Vijayaraje Scindia Krishi Vishwa Vidyalaya Gwalior–474002 (M.P.) 187 Department of Agronomy Ist Semester Course No. Title Credit Major Courses Agron 601 Current Trends in Agronomy 3+1 Agron 604 Advances in crop growth & productivity 2+1 Agron 605 Irrigation management 2+1 Minor Courses Soils 602 Advances in soil fertility 2+0 Soils 605 Biochemistry of Soil organic matter 2+0 Supporting Courses STAT 521 Applied Regression Analysis 2+1 Non-Credit Courses PGS501 Library &Information Services 0+1 PGS502 Technical Writing & Communication Skill 0+1 PGS503 Intellectual property& Its management in 1+0 Agriculture IInd Semester Major Courses Agron 606 Advance in weed management 2+0 Agron 607 Integrated farming system and sustainable 2+0 agriculture Agron 608 Soil conservation & watershed management 2+1 189 Minor Courses Soils 505 Soil Erosion & conservation 2+1 Soils 606 Land use planning & watershed management 2+0 Supporting Courses STAT 531 Data Analysis Using Statistical Analysis 2+0 Non-Credit Courses PGS504 Basic Concept in Laboratory Technique 0+1 PGS505 Agricultural Research, Research Ethics and 1+0 Rural development program PGS506 Disaster Management 1+0 IIIrd –IVth Semester Agron. 691 Doctoral Seminar I 0+1 Agron. 692 Doctoral Seminar II 0+1 IVth –VIth Semester Agron. 699 Doctoral Research 0+45 190 AGRON 601 Current Trends in Agronomy 3+0 Objective To acquaint the students about recent advances in agricultural production.
    [Show full text]
  • Claimant's Memorial on Merits and Damages
    Public Version INTERNATIONAL CENTRE FOR ICSID Case No. ARB/16/16 SETTLEMENT OF INVESTMENT DISPUTES BETWEEN GLOBAL TELECOM HOLDING S.A.E. Claimant and GOVERNMENT OF CANADA Respondent CLAIMANT’S MEMORIAL ON THE MERITS AND DAMAGES 29 September 2017 GIBSON, DUNN & CRUTCHER LLP Telephone House 2-4 Temple Avenue London EC4Y 0HB United Kingdom GIBSON, DUNN & CRUTCHER LLP 200 Park Avenue New York, NY 10166 United States of America Public Version TABLE OF CONTENTS I. Introduction ............................................................................................................................ 1 II. Executive Summary ............................................................................................................... 3 III. Canada’s Wireless Telecommunications Market And Framework For The 2008 AWS Auction................................................................................................................................. 17 A. Overview Of Canada’s Wireless Telecommunications Market Leading Up To The 2008 AWS Auction.............................................................................................. 17 1. Introduction to Wireless Telecommunications .................................................. 17 2. Canada’s Wireless Telecommunications Market At The Time Of The 2008 AWS Auction ............................................................................................ 20 B. The 2008 AWS Auction Framework And Its Key Conditions ................................... 23 1. The Terms Of The AWS Auction Consultation
    [Show full text]
  • An Improved Text Sentiment Classification Model Using TF-IDF and Next Word Negation
    An Improved Text Sentiment Classification Model Using TF-IDF and Next Word Negation Bijoyan Das Sarit Chakraborty Student Member, IEEE Member, IEEE, Kolkata, India Abstract – With the rapid growth of Text sentiment tickets. Although this is a very trivial problem, text analysis, the demand for automatic classification of classification can be used in many different areas as electronic documents has increased by leaps and bound. follows: The paradigm of text classification or text mining has been the subject of many research works in recent time. Most of the consumer based companies use In this paper we propose a technique for text sentiment sentiment classification to automatically classification using term frequency- inverse document generate reports on customer feedback. It is an frequency (TF-IDF) along with Next Word Negation integral part of CRM. [2] (NWN). We have also compared the performances of In medical science, text classification is used to binary bag of words model, TF-IDF model and TF-IDF analyze and categorize reports, clinical trials, with ‘next word negation’ (TF-IDF-NWN) model for hospital records etc. [2] text classification. Our proposed model is then applied Text classification models are also used in law on three different text mining algorithms and we found on the various trial data, verdicts, court the Linear Support vector machine (LSVM) is the most transcripts etc. [2] appropriate to work with our proposed model. The Text classification models can also be used for achieved results show significant increase in accuracy Spam email classification. [7] compared to earlier methods. In this paper we have demonstrated a study on the three different techniques to build models for text I.
    [Show full text]
  • A Novel Architecture for Internet of Things in Precision Agriculture
    International Journal of Applied Engineering Research ISSN 0973-4562 Volume 15, Number 3 (2020) pp. 204-211 © Research India Publications. http://www.ripublication.com A Novel Architecture For Internet of Things in Precision Agriculture Jisha Jayadevan Smitha M Jasmine Department of Computer Science and Engineering Assistant Professor College of Engineering and Management Punnapra, Department of Computer Science and Engineering Alappuzha, India. College of Engineering and Management Punnapra, (E-Mail: [email protected]) Alappuzha, India. (E-Mail: [email protected]) Suresh Kumar N Associate Professor Department of Computer Science and Engineering College of Engineering and Management Punnapra, Alappuzha, India. (E-Mail: [email protected]) Abstract IoT keeps the devices or things interconnected and uses in a Internet of Things is the most evolving technology that productive way to such an extent that the information is changes the face of the world. However, the agriculture gathered and communicated utilizing the Internet without domain in India lacks technological advancements. The use of human interaction. Smart homes and buildings, wearables, the Internet of Things in agriculture can make devices smart cities, smart grid, healthcare, smart farming, autonomous to collect data or information required to increase transportation, smart retail and logistics are some application the yield of Agri-products in a scientific way. Precision domains of IoT [2]. The main components of IoT are sensors Agriculture is an approach for farm management to make sure or devices, connectivity, data processing, and user interface. that the crops and fields receive whatever resources they need The internal working of IoT is depicted in Fig. 1. Sensors or for maintaining optimal health and productivity through the devices are deployed and programmed to collect the data from use of information technology.
    [Show full text]