AI and Inclusion
Understanding the design and deployment of AI to benefit all members of society, including traditionally underserved communities.
The impact that AI will have on education and employment in the future is undeniable, but the possible outcomes of AI research with those in the largest minority group have yet to be fully explored. The United Nations estimates that over a billion people live with some form of disability and AI could be a force for good for this group as long as they are not marginalised.
The global assistive technology market is set to exceed $26 billion by 2024 but in many low and middle-income countries, there is limited access to these technologies. However, the growing use of AI in mobile, free and open source applications and knowledge sharing of expertise could help to achieve the World Health Organisation's goal for Universal Health Coverage which "can be advanced inclusively only if people are able to access quality assistive products when and where they need them".
The impact that AI will have on education and employment in the future is undeniable, but AI research could be a force for good for the more than a billion people who live with some form of disability as long as they are not marginalised.
The impact of this work could become part of the World Health Organisation's drive to address the "unmet need of assistive products [that] is crucial to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals, to provide Universal Health Coverage, and to implement the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities".