AMBA's Ambition magazine: Issue 73, June 2024

THE ALGORITHMIC AGENDA Meetings have long been a source of frustration and inefficiency in the workplace, consuming time, energy and resources. With the rise of generative artificial intelligence, the question to ask is this – do humans actually have to attend them anymore? Mark Minevich ruminates on whether technology might take our place at the table T he annual cost of running business meetings has been

but this is an area that AI researchers are tackling – equipping AI agents with more robust social awareness and theory of mind. If successful, such bots could fit seamlessly into human workplace gatherings, interacting naturally without rigidness. They might even improve group cohesiveness with perfectly polite and inclusive behaviour. Taking the tedium out of administrative tasks It is essential to have AI exhibit some degree of creativity, strategic thinking, judgment and complex reasoning. Adding value in higher stakes meetings would also be essential rather than just serving as a note-taking assistant. Replicating human cognition and thinking patterns remains the most significant obstacle. Critical analysis and imagination don’t directly emerge from today’s neural networks, no matter their scale. For the foreseeable future, uniquely human strengths will likely give us an edge when higher-order cognitive skills are required in meetings – skills that are increasingly imperative in senior leadership roles. Before AI outright replaces meetings, the technology can enhance human collaboration. AI meeting assistants could help automate administrative tasks such as scheduling, note-taking, action item tracking and document sharing – tedious responsibilities that can be draining in lengthy sessions. Such tools already exist but current offerings lack deep language understanding. The power of AI to accurately capture, comprehend and contextualise meeting content is still emerging. AI powered by large language models could also facilitate remote and hybrid gatherings where reading social cues can be challenging. Features such as real-time personalised transcriptions, translations, closed captions and voice commands provide flexibility. Digital whiteboard solutions allow seamless information sharing and live editing regardless of location. Tools to track and assess meeting efficiency Perhaps most disruptive is the potential for AI analytics that can evaluate meeting patterns over time. Data collected across an

estimated at well over $30 billion in the US alone and statistics show that, on average, employees spend nearly a third of their working week in some kind of meeting. It is surely high time that organisations devised an alternative strategy; recent technological advances might provide the answer, as they are making the notion of AI-driven meetings a realistic possibility. ChatGPT’s highly articulate and conversational nature hints at the future capabilities of AI language models. While the technology still has obvious limitations, its fluid user interactions demonstrate how it could plausibly simulate human discussion and debate on some level. If interfacing with humans is the primary purpose of meetings, perhaps sophisticated AI bots could take on more of the legwork while we chime in only when necessary. Such AI would require solid situational awareness and an understanding of group dynamics to participate effectively in the free-flowing chaos of a meeting. Interpreting subtle jokes, tensions, personalities and emotional tones in a room is tremendously complex,

36 | Ambition | JUNE 2024

Made with FlippingBook - Share PDF online