Zeit und Ort: 12.12.2019 von 12:15 bis 13:45 Uhr, Raum F4090, WiWi2 Geb?ude.
Vortragender: Prof. Youngjin Yoo, Case Western Reserve University
Titel: AI as Information Infrastructure and the Future of Firms
Workshop: 15:15 - 17:15 Uhr, Raum A2020, WiWi1 Geb?ude.
am 12. Dezember wird Professor Youngjin Yoo (Case Western Reserve University; https://weatherhead.case.edu/faculty/Youngjin-Yoo/) die Diginomics Research Group besuchen und einen Vortrag zum Thema ?AI as Information Infrastructure and the Future of Firms“ halten. Youngjin Yoo z?hlt zu den weltweit absolut führenden Forschern im Bereich ?Digital Innovation/ Digital Transformation“ und hat zahlreiche Papiere in Elite-Journals wie Information Systems Research, MIS Quarterly, Academy of Management Journal und Organization Science ver?ffentlicht bzw. war als Herausgeber für sie t?tig. Eine Zusammenfassung zu dem Vortrag sowie ein Short CV von Prof. Yoo finden Sie weiter unten.
Im Anschluss an den Vortrag im Brownbag Seminar findet ein Workshop zur Weiterentwicklung von Forschungspapieren mit Prof. Yoo statt. Hier werden 2 bis 4 aktuelle Arbeitspapiere pr?sentiert und darüber mit Prof. Yoo diskutiert, wie diese zur Publikationsf?higkeit weiter entwickelt werden k?nnen. Der Workshop beginnt um 15:15 Uhr im Raum A2020 im WiWi1 Geb?ude und endet um 17:15 Uhr.
Abstract. In this talk, I develop two interrelated ideas. First, I put forward the notion that it is beneficial to conceptualize artificial intelligence (AI) as an assemblage of distributed heterogeneous computing resources, autonomous algorithm, and ever-changing data, in short, information infrastructure. By seeing AI as assemblage, I explicitly recognize that “intelligence” of AI is a dynamic emergent property of the temporary and dynamic binding of distributed and heterogenous hardware, software and data in information infrastructure. Just like intelligence emerges from temporary connections among neurons — one that is actualized instance out of innumerable other possible such connections —, artificial intelligence must be understood as actualized instances of connections among heterogeneous and distributed elements in vast information infrastructure, out of innumerable other possible connections among distributed and heterogenous elements in information infrastructure. Such a distributed and infrastructure-centric view of AI, contrary to a view that sees AI as a discrete container of algorithms, provides a plausible explanation on the historical evolution of AI. More importantly, it recognizes the multiplicity, temporality, and situationality of emergent intelligence of AI.
Second, given the increasingly important role that emergent intelligence of AI in firms, I argue that we need a new theory of a firm that recognizes how information infrastructure is centrally integrated in the value creation process by which algorithms mobilize deferred, temporary, situational, and recombinant assemblage of material physical and non-material digital assets to produce marketable goods and services. The emergent intelligence of algorithms then must be treated as the core element of any attempt to build a new theory of a firm. This will lead to the unbundling and re-bundling of the traditional firms, and the contemporary digital innovation phenomenon like digital platform ecosystems must be understood in this context. I will use the digital transformation of healthcare as an empirical illustration to support this argument. I will conclude by speculating theoretical and managerial implications of the emergence of the new model of a firm.
Short CV. Youngjin Yoo is the Elizabeth M. and William C. Treuhaft Professor in Entrepreneurship and Professor of Information Systems at the department of Design & Innovation at the Weatherhead School of Management, Case Western Reserve University. An Association of Information Systems Fellow, he is also WBS Distinguished Research Environment Professor at Warwick Business School, UK. and a Visiting Professor at the London School of Economics, UK. He is the founding faculty director of xLab at Case Western Reserve University. He has worked as Innovation Architect at the University Hospitals in Cleveland, overseeing the digital transformation efforts at one of the largest teaching hospital systems in the country. He studies digital innovation and publishes at leading academic journals such as MIS Quarterly, Information Systems Research, Organization Science, the Communications of the ACM, and the Academy of Management Journal among others.