AI or Artificial Intelligence is raking up a storm in every sector of life. So it’s quite natural that healthcare and education will also benefit from this cutting-edge technology. Keep this in mind the government is mulling over the idea of introducing AI in healthcare, education, agriculture, and transportation in India.

What is it?

The government think tank Niti Aayog plans to adopt artificial intelligence in healthcare, agriculture, education, infrastructure, and transportation as revealed in its discussion paper National Strategy for Artificial Intelligence, released on Monday.

Objectives of the proposal

Finance minister Arun Jaitley had entrusted NITI Aayog with the task of initiating a national programme with the aim of facilitating research in artificial intelligence related areas in the Union Budget 2018 in February.

The Aayog said that the National Strategy for Artificial Intelligence was aimed at leveraging AI for economic growth, social development, and inclusive growth, and also to make the country a model for emerging and developing economies.

Barriers To Be Addressed

It has further identified five barriers to achieving its goal of #AIforAll. These include:

  • Lack of broad-based expertise in research and application
  • An absence of enabling data ecosystems — access to intelligent data
  • High resource cost and low awareness for adoption
  • Privacy and security issues, including lack of formal regulations around anonymization of data
  • The absence of a collaborative approach to adoption and application of AI

Effectivity of AI

  1. According to Niti Aayog, its application to healthcare can increase access and affordability of quality healthcare, and when applied to agriculture, it can enhance farmers income, increase productivity, and reduce wastage.
  2. The Aayog has also proposed a two-tier structure to expand research on AI in India: The Centre of Research Excellence (CORE), focussed on pushing technology frontiers through the creation of new knowledge, and the International Centres of Transformational AI (ICTAI), with a mandate of developing and deploying application-based research.
  3. Besides, it has proposed setting up of an artificial intelligence Research, Analytics and knowledge Assimilation platform (AIRAWAT) as a common commute platform to support the advancement of AI-based developments.
  4. It has also suggested the establishment of IP facilitation centers to help bridge the gap between practitioners and AI developers, and to provide adequate training to IP-granting authorities, the judiciary, and tribunals.
  5. NITI Aayog CEO Amitabh Kant recently said that application of AI to different sectors could help increase India’s year-on-year (YoY) growth rate by 1.3% and that the government was already working with organizations such as Microsoft and IBM in that direction.
  6. India initially plans to fund its AI programmes from the $29.7 Mn (INR 200 Cr) allocated under the Atal Innovation Mission.

Source: Inc42