Manufacturers slow Gen AI rollout on rising accuracy concerns, says study https://yakihonne.s3.ap-east-1.amazonaws.com/ad6a909b8dfd6e278f94881d83dbd5ad5f9260c7502175059b29042e589fb93c/files/1718635375605-YAKIHONNES3.jpg Manufacturers are deploying planned Generative AI initiatives at a slower-than-anticipated pace on concerns around accuracy, Lucidworks said in a study on Wednesday. The study surveyed over 2,500 leaders worldwide involved in AI technology decision-making and found that 58% of manufacturing leaders plan to increase spending on AI in 2024. This is lower than the global consensus of 63% and U.S. consensus of 69%.In 2023, 93% of all leaders and 93% of manufacturing leaders planned to increase spending on AI.
study conducted by Lucidworks, manufacturers are deploying planned Generative AI initiatives at a slower pace than anticipated due to concerns around accuracy. The study surveyed over 2,500 leaders worldwide involved in AI technology decision-making and found that 58% of manufacturing leaders plan to increase spending on AI in 2024, which is lower than the global consensus of 63% and the U.S. consensus of 69%
According to a study released by Lucidworks on Wednesday, manufacturers are implementing planned Generative AI initiatives more slowly than expected due to concerns about accuracy. The study, which surveyed over 2,500 global leaders involved in AI technology decisions, found that 58% of manufacturing leaders intend to increase their AI spending in 2024. This figure is lower than the global average of 63% and the U.S. average of 69%. In 2023, 93% of all leaders, including those in manufacturing,
Lucidworks, manufacturers are deploying planned Generative AI initiatives at a slower pace than anticipated due to concerns around accuracy . The study surveyed over 2,500 leaders worldwide involved in AI technology decision-making and found that 58% of manufacturing leaders plan to increase spending on AI in 2024, which is lower than the global consensus of 63%