Robots won't steal our jobs if we put workers at center of AI revolution

While we agree about the seismic changes afoot, we

don't believe this is the right way to think about it. Approaching the challenge this way assumes society has to be passive about how tomorrow's technologies are designed and implemented. The truth is there is no absolute law that determines the shape and consequences of innovation. We can all influence where it takes us.
Thus, the question society should be asking is: "How can we direct the development of future technologies so that robots complement rather than replace us?"
The Japanese have an apt phrase for this: "giving wisdom to the machines." And the wisdom comes from workers and an integrated approach to  design, as our research shows.
Lessons from history
There is no question coming technologies like AI will eliminate some , as did those of the past.
More than half of the American workforce was involved in farming in the 1890s, back when it was a physically demanding, labor-intensive industry. Today, thanks to mechanization and the use of sophisticated data analytics to handle the operation of crops and cattle, fewer than 2 percent are in agriculture, yet their output is significantly higher.
But new technologies will also create . After steam engines replaced water wheels as the source of power in manufacturing in the 1800s, the sector expanded sevenfold, from 1.2 million jobs in 1830 to 8.3 million by 1910. Similarly, many feared that the ATM's emergence in the early 1970s would replace bank tellers. Yet even though the machines are now ubiquitous, there are actually more tellers today doing a wider variety of customer service tasks.


Read more at: https://phys.org/news/2017-08-robots-wont-jobs-workers-center.html#jCp