AI in the Administrative State | AI, Automated Vehicles, and Transportation Policy
AI, Automated Vehicles, and Transportation Policy
Moderator: Jeff Ward, Duke Law School, Duke Center on Law & Technology
Missy Cummings, Duke University
Michael Clamann, Duke University
Bryant Walker Smith, University of South Carolina Law
Artificial intelligence (AI) is being employed in the private sector to optimize production processes, pricing, and other business functions. But apart from national security and law enforcement, productive uses in the public sector have received less attention, despite recognition that the administrative state's foremost challenges include efficient processing of ever-increasing amounts of data, and adapting to new information over time. Duke Law's Center for Innovation Policy, Duke Law's Center on Law & Technology, Duke Science & Society, and the Rethinking Regulation Program at the Kenan Institute of Ethics held a joint conference to explore promising uses of AI and the challenges they pose in administering diverse governmental functions involving science, technology, health and intellectual property.