Talk to anyone who isn't retiring this year about job security, and the conversation is bound to drift toward artificial intelligence and the very real threat it poses to human jobs. The more the bots track our movements and learn how it is we do our jobs and how we troubleshoot, the smarter they will become and eventually take our place, the logic goes.
Once upon a time, Americans feared that cheap overseas labor would end up with their jobs. Now the existential crisis comes from everywhere, even here, with American companies like Nvidia.
Is any occupation protected from AI poaching, beyond plumbing and sanitation engineer? How about car designers? Sure, AI can generate all sorts of car concepts in a matter of seconds, but are they just reinterpreted versions of cars already in production? And designing for manufacturability is a critically important skill in today's auto industry that relies on cross-functional teams to check each other's work and, for instance, make sure that wild instrument panel will actually fit through the narrow door opening of the sleek two-seater on the assembly line.
Designers and engineers at General Motors have decided that resistance is futile, and that it's better to see how much AI can improve their work than dig in their heels and insist the human brain is the only asset that matters. "Processes that once took weeks or months of heavy lifting now happen in minutes, creating efficiencies that allow more room for human creativity," the company says about the application of AI, not for taking over car design but augmenting human creativity and accelerating product development.
The Pencil Still Matters
GM's design team sees AI freeing up "creatives" at the automaker to dream up more ideas and more iterations, and they say every new vehicle still comes from the tip of a pencil in the hand of a breathing designer who has studied what customers want. "What’s changed is what designers can extrapolate from those earliest sketches in a single day," the automaker says.
“Human creativity sets the vision, AI helps us see the outcomes of that vision sooner.”
–GM Designer Daniel Shapiro
In a recent project, designer Daniel Shapiro, who has experimented with AI-driven visualization tools, fed a series of hand-drawn sketches of a futuristic Chevrolet concept into an AI tool. The AI tool generated several images and a teaser animation that showed the concept in 3D motion.
Source: General Motors
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This article originally appeared on CarBuzz and is republished here with permission.