The Age of Prediction: Algorithms, Ai, and the Shifting Shadows of Risk

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Product Details
Price
$27.95  $25.99
Publisher
MIT Press
Publish Date
Pages
232
Dimensions
6.3 X 9.1 X 1.0 inches | 0.95 pounds
Language
English
Type
Hardcover
EAN/UPC
9780262047739

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About the Author
Igor Tulchinsky is founder, chairman, and CEO of WorldQuant, a quantitative investment firm based in Old Greenwich, Connecticut. He is the author of Finding Alphas: A Quantitative Approach to Building Trading Strategies and The UnRules: Man, Machines and the Quest to Master Markets.

Christopher E. Mason is Professor of Genomics, Physiology, and Biophysics at Weill Cornell Medicine and the Director of the WorldQuant Initiative for Quantitative Prediction. He also holds affiliate appointments at the New York Genome Center, Yale Law School, and the Consortium for Space Genetics at Harvard Medical School. Dr. Mason is the author of The Next 500 Years: Engineering Life to Reach New Worlds.
Reviews
Included in The Next Big Idea Club's August 2023 Must-Read Books list
Included in FT business books -- what to read this month

"An ambitious new survey of how predictive algorithms are changing the world. Its publication could hardly be better timed...The Age of Prediction avoids getting bogged down in the debate over what actually counts as AI. Instead, it goes directly to the source and identifies the three big changes which in practice lie behind the startling achievements of the past decade."
--The Financial Times

"If readers need convincing of the significance of prediction to today's world, the opening chapter of The Age of Prediction will leave few in doubt. Mason and Tulchinsky lay out its role in the pandemic: from the lives lost as a result of failure to predict Covid-19 and the role of algorithms in the creation of vaccines, to the rally of stock markets as financial models recovered from that initial shock. The message is clear: predictive algorithms have changed the world, and all the worlds to come, and there is no going back The authors continue with a thrilling dive into the many ways algorithms are doing so: from the development of autonomous robots and large language models, to accurate predictions of voting patterns; from improved cancer treatments to ever more lethal smart weapons...They also pack the book with compelling anecdotes and insights, including accounts of their experience working in computational biology and data-driven predictive finance."
--The Financial Times

"Human freedom may still be a force to reckon with, say Igor Tulchinsky and Christopher E. Mason in The Age of Prediction: Algorithms, AI, and the shifting shadows of risk. They explore why the more predictable world ushered in by AI may not be safer. Humans evolved to take risks, and weird incentives emerge when predictability seems to increase and risk seems to decline. Tulchinsky, who analyses data flows in financial markets, and Mason, a geneticist who maps dynamics across human and microbial genomes, make odd bedfellows. Mason welcomes any advance that makes medicine more reliable; Tulchinsky fears perfect prediction would render humans as docile and demoralised as cattle. The authors' spirited dialogue illuminates their detailed survey of what predictive tech can do, from warfare to politics."
--New Scientist