Are robots coming for our jobs? - Action News
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ScienceAnalysis

Are robots coming for our jobs?

From self-driving taxis, to drones delivering fast food, it seems like everything is becoming automated these days.

The growth of robotics will transform customer service, transportation, education and medicine

Automated restaurants like this one in China are springing up around the world. An government sponsored exhibition of mechanized food service could put Canada on the map.
Automated restaurants like this one in China are springing up around the world. (Reuters)

From self-driving taxis, to drones delivering fast food, it seems like everything is becoming automated. Convenient? Definitely. But at whatcost?

A new Forrester research reportpredicts that in just five years, robots will steal six per centof U.S. jobs, forecastingthat "a disruptive tidal wave will begin" by 2021. It predicts the biggest impact will occurin transportation, logistics, customer service and consumer services.

We've always known that in the future, robots will be doing many of the jobs we do today. Butthat future suddenly appears to be imminent. 2021 is right around the corner, and to get a sense of what jobs robots will be performing in five years, all you have to do is look at what's already happeningright around us.
A group of self-driving Uber vehicles position themselves to take journalists on rides during a media preview at Uber's Advanced Technologies Center in Pittsburgh, on Sept. 12, 2016. (Gene J. Puskar/Associated Press)

Uber is currently testing self-driving carsin Pittsburgh. Select Lowe's stores are starting to roll out customer service robots that will help you find your way around the big box outlets, and Google and Chipotle are testing drone delivery of burritos at Virginia Tech.

Then there areall of our virtual assistants: Siri, Cortana, and Alexa are the big names, but there's also a whole new generation of chatbots being integrated into all sorts of applications and toolsto help with travel plans, booking meetings, finding directions.

If you've installed the latest iPhone OS update, your virtual assistant can now tell you how long it will take you to get to your next meeting based on real-time traffic and the locations in your calendar.
Humanoid robots Nao (on the left) and Pepper (on the right between the two humans) are the products of SoftBank Robotics. (Ramona Pringle)

Future shock

Change happens fast. Technology advances exponentially, not at a steady linear pace. So while we may still get frustrated when Siri is buggy or unresponsive, in five yearsthese technologies are going to be much better at handling complex decisions and scenariosin some cases, even better than us.

While the Forresterreport pinpoints transportation and customer service as industries that are ripe for disruption, the growth of artificial intelligence and robotics will touch everything from educationto medicineto the financial sector,as machines have the capability to perform tasks more efficiently and accurately than humans.
The virtual assistants on our smartphones will be much better at dealing with complex scenarios in future years. (iStockphoto)

Ajantha Ganeshalingam, founder of Wiser Investment, a Toronto-based startup that built a financial robo-adviserplatformto helpinvestors, says, "The speed of data processing, insights and analysis that can be automated is more than can be done by an adviser. More importantly, it will make it affordable for the masses."

While automated solutions are financially attractive for companies, the shift is understandably worrisome for the peoplewhose jobs are at risk of being displaced by robots. So how concerned should we be?
The Smart Tissue Autonomous Robot (STAR) surgical assistant can suture soft tissue as well as human surgeons. (Children's National Health System)

There is a debate as to what impact robots will have on jobs and the economy. Some say technology is destroying jobs, where others say it is creating opportunities to think about work in a new way. At the heart of that debate is the question of whether robots will replacehumans, or complement us in the work force.

There is no doubt that a lot of the jobs that have been done by humans up to now, will be supplanted by robots or automated systems. But with every era, as our technologies have evolved, so has our relationship to work.

John Havens, author of Heartificial Intelligence: Embracing our Humanity to Maximize Machines, points out that instead of fear-mongering, what we need to be doing is figuring out how to best manage this period of transition.

Managing the transition

So how do we prepare? When it comes to identifying the skills necessary to stay competitive in a quickly changing world, one of the biggest challenges we currently face is that we don't know what we don't know.

The Future of Jobs report cites an estimate that 65 per centof children entering primary schools today "will ultimately work in new job types and functions that currently don't yet exist."

Skills in the STEM subjectsscience, technology, engineeringand math are priorities, but we're also going to see an increased demand for people with cognitive abilitiessuch as problem solving and creativity.

The Future of Jobs report says"many formerly purely technical occupations are expected to show a new demand for creative and interpersonal skills."

John Havens agrees, saying, "Emotional well-being and people-to-people oriented interactions" are top amongst the skills we should be developing.

"Soon the rarity of data or machine influenced interactions will make our core human traits more precious than ever before."