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AI is transforming how we work, accelerating productivity and decision-making across every industry—but it's also introducing a subtle, dangerous side effect: the erosion of human problem-solving, critical thinking, and technical intuition. This phenomenon, which I call AI Atrophy, represents the quiet decline of our cognitive and creative abilities as individuals increasingly rely on artificial intelligence to provide solutions, rather than to support their understanding.
This talk challenges the assumption that more automation is always better.
We’ll explore:
Attendees will walk away with practical methods for maintaining intellectual rigor, encouraging curiosity, and building healthy boundaries around AI adoption. As leaders, it’s not enough to deploy intelligent systems—we must also ensure we’re not unintentionally designing a future workforce that forgets how to think for itself.
By ExpedientAI is transforming how we work, accelerating productivity and decision-making across every industry—but it's also introducing a subtle, dangerous side effect: the erosion of human problem-solving, critical thinking, and technical intuition. This phenomenon, which I call AI Atrophy, represents the quiet decline of our cognitive and creative abilities as individuals increasingly rely on artificial intelligence to provide solutions, rather than to support their understanding.
This talk challenges the assumption that more automation is always better.
We’ll explore:
Attendees will walk away with practical methods for maintaining intellectual rigor, encouraging curiosity, and building healthy boundaries around AI adoption. As leaders, it’s not enough to deploy intelligent systems—we must also ensure we’re not unintentionally designing a future workforce that forgets how to think for itself.