Archive for October, 2022

ACS Receives BOA Award Providing Data Readiness for Artificial Intelligence Development (DRAID) for DoD Joint Artificial Intelligence Center (JAIC)…

RESTON, Va.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Assured Consulting Solutions (ACS) is proud to announce receiving an award to the basic ordering agreement (BOA) providing Data Readiness for Artificial Intelligence Development (DRAID) for the DoD Joint Artificial Intelligence Center (JAIC) and the Chief Digital and Artificial Intelligence Office. This BOA is a decentralized vehicle that streamlines rapid procurement and agile delivery of AI data readiness capabilities for Defense AI initiatives. The streamlined methodologies implemented will benefit both industry and government partners by increasing competition and flexibility for each task order.

The successful use of AI depends critically on the availability of quality data that can be used to build reliable AI-enabled systems. The DRAID vehicle will address the entire data lifecycle, from collection, through pre-processing, up to before AI system creation. It will also support AI-specific requirements, including unique challenges in operationalizing data for AI. DRAID is also customizable; it enables the selection of a custom subset of AI data readiness services to meet individual needs. ACS will leverage our DeepGovernance practice and D2SAM approach to help DoD customers to prepare for rapid and agile AI technologies.

ABOUT ASSURED CONSULTING SOLUTIONS

Founded in 2011 and headquartered in Reston, Va., Assured Consulting Solutions is a well-respected and trusted partner, domain expert, and provider of expert-level support. ACS is a certified Woman-Owned Small Business (WOSB) that delivers advanced technology solutions and strategic support services in support of critical national security missions for Intelligence, Defense, and Federal Civilian customers. Learn more at http://www.assured-consulting.com.

ABOUT D2SAM

ACSs Data-Driven Secure Agile Methodology (D2SAM) is a framework of engineering and non-technical tools, processes, and techniques supported by an underlying model-based infrastructure, data environment, and process library. The D2SAM Framework is organized into four cyclical quadrants that reflect the continuous delivery of services and systems to customers. ACS envisions our customers being on a continual journey through strategy, design, transition, and operations (SDTO) cycles leading towards their future goals and operational outcomes. Learn more at https://www.assured-consulting.com/blog/2021/12/17/acs-announces-trademark-registration-of-d2sam

Excerpt from:
ACS Receives BOA Award Providing Data Readiness for Artificial Intelligence Development (DRAID) for DoD Joint Artificial Intelligence Center (JAIC)...

Jordan Klepper Takes on Election Deniers and the Upcoming Death of Democracy in Latest Comedy Central Special (EXCLUSIVE) – Variety

Jordan Kleppers latest half-hour The Daily Show special, The Daily Show with Trevor Noah Presents: Jordan Klepper Fingers the Midterms America Unfollows Democracy, is set to bow on Nov. 1 at 11:30 p.m. ET, Comedy Central is set to announce on Tuesday.

The new special will follow Daily Show contributor Klepper as he interviews Republican voters who have fallen under the spell of 2020 election deniers and who now plan to vote for candidates who threaten to subvert the entire election process. The result is a quest to figure out if America is ghosting democracy.

Jordan Klepper Fingers the Midterms America Unfollows Democracy will also be available on Paramount+, the Daily Show YouTube channel, CC.com, video on demand and Comedy Central apps starting Nov. 2.

The logline: For nearly 250 years, the peaceful transfer of power has been a cornerstone of American Democracy. But with a large percentage of Republicans denying that Joe Biden is president, and capitol rioters running for office across the country, Jordan Klepper wonders: Is America unfollowing democracy? In this new half-hour special, Jordan goes back on the campaign trail before the midterms to find out whos defending Americas elections, who is denying them, and just how civil we can keep Americas next civil war.

Indeed, its once again up to The Daily Show and its fellow late night brethren to expose the truth about how democracy is dangerously close to losing its grip in this country, and how concerned we truly should be while the mainstream network news departments continue to shirk their duties and focus aimlessly on the horse race instead.

As Noah prepares to depart The Daily Show on Dec. 8, Kleppers name is among the potential candidates to replace the host. (Others mentioned in the mix include Daily Show correspondent Roy Wood Jr.)

Jordan Klepper Fingers the Midterms America Unfollows Democracy reps Kleppers third special for Comedy Central, following The Daily Show with Trevor Noah Presents: Jordan Klepper Fingers the Globe Hungary for Democracy, which followed him traveling to alt-right Hungary. That special received an Emmy nomination, as did his first entry, The Daily Show with Trevor Noah Presents: Jordan Klepper Fingers the Pulse Into the MAGAverse, which chronicled his experience on the Trump campaign trail in 2020. That one also received a DGA nom.

Klepper is also behind The Daily Show short-form seriesJordan Klepper Fingers The Pulse, in which he interviews insurrectionists, anti-vaxxers and Trump supporters. And theres the podcast companion Jordan Klepper Fingers the Conspiracy,a six-episode limited series podcast co-produced by iHeartPodcasts and hosted by Jordan, which launches on November 9. According to Comedy Central, a compilation of Klepper moments at Trump rallies has now clocked more than 154 million views across multiple platforms.

Besides serving as host, Klepper is the EP and writer ofThe Daily Show with Trevor Noah Presents: Jordan Klepper Fingers The Midterms America Unfollows Democracy. Trevor Noah, Jen Flanz and Jill Katz are exec producers; Ian Berger is co-exec producer and director. Heres a first look at the promo:

More:
Jordan Klepper Takes on Election Deniers and the Upcoming Death of Democracy in Latest Comedy Central Special (EXCLUSIVE) - Variety

How Can Artificial Intelligence Help With Suicidal Ideation? – Theravive

A new study published in the Journal of Psychiatric Research looked at the performance of machine learning models in predicting suicidal ideation, attempts, and deaths.

My study sought to quantify the ability of existing machine learning models to predict future suicide-related events, study author Karen Kusuma told us. While there are other research studies examining a similar question, my study is the first to use clinically relevant and statistically appropriate performance measures for the machine learning studies.

The utility of artificial intelligence has been a controversial topic in psychiatry, and medicine overall. Some studies have demonstrated better performance with machine learning methods, while others have not. Kusuma began the study expecting that machine learning models would perform well.

Suicide is a leading cause of years of life lost across most of Europe, central Asia, southern Latin America, and Australia (Naghavi, 2019; Australian Bureau of Statistics, 2020), Kusuma told us. Standard clinical practice dictates that people seeking help for suicide-related issues need to be first administered with a suicide risk assessment. However, research has found that suicide risk predictions tend to be inaccurate.

Only five per cent of people ordinarily classified as high risk died by suicide, while around half of those who died by suicide would normally be categorised as low risk (Large, Ryan, Carter, & Kapur, 2017). Unfortunately, there has been no improvement in suicide prediction research in the last fifty years (Franklin et al., 2017).

Some researchers have claimed that machine learning will become an efficient and effective alternative to current suicide risk assessments (e.g. Fonseka et al., 2019), Kusuma told us, so I wanted to examine the potential of machine learning quantitatively, while evaluating the methodology currently used in the literature.

Researchers searched for relevant studies across four research databases and identified 56 relevant studies. From there, 54 models from 35 studies had sufficient data, and were included in the quantitative analyses.

We found that machine learning models achieved a very good overall performance according to clinical diagnostic standards, Kusuma told us. The models correctly predicted 66% of the people who would experience a suicide-related event (i.e. ideation, attempt, or death), and correctly predicted 87% of the people who would not experience a suicide-related event.

However, there was a high prevalence of risk of bias in the research, with many studies processing or analysing the data inappropriately. This isnt a finding specific to machine learning research, but a systemic issue caused largely by a publish-or-perish culture in academia.

I did expect machine learning models to do well, so I think this review establishes a good benchmark for future research, Kusuma told us. I do believe that this review shows the potential of machine learning to transform the future of suicide risk prediction. Automated suicide risk screening would be quicker and more consistent than current methods.

This could potentially identify many people at risk of suicide without them having to reach out proactively. However, researchers need to be careful to minimise data leakage, which would skew performance measures. Furthermore, many iterations of development and validation need to take place to ensure that the machine learning models can predict suicide risk in previously unseen populations.

Prior to deployment, researchers also need to ascertain if artificial intelligence would work in an equitable manner across people from different backgrounds, Kusuma told us. For example, a study has found their machine learning models performed better in predicting deaths by suicide in White patients, as opposed to Black and American Indian/ Alaskan Native patients (Coley et al., 2022).

That isnt to say that artificial intelligence is inherently discriminatory, Kusuma explained, but there is less data available for minorities, which often means lower performance in those populations. Its possible that models need to be developed and validated separately for people of different demographic characteristics.

Machine learning is an exciting innovation in suicide research, Kusuma told us. An improvement in suicide prediction abilities would mean that resources could be allocated to those who need them the most.

Categories: Depression , Stress , Suicide | Tags: suicide, depression, machine

Patricia Tomasi is a mom, maternal mental health advocate, journalist, and speaker. She writes regularly for the Huffington Post Canada,focusing primarily on maternal mental health after suffering from severe postpartum anxiety twice. You can find her Huffington Post biography here. Patricia is also a Patient Expert Advisor for the North American-based,Maternal Mental Health Research Collectiveand is the founder of the online peer support group -Facebook Postpartum Depression & Anxiety Support Group - with over 1500 members worldwide. Blog:www.patriciatomasiblog.wordpress.com Email:tomasi.patricia@gmail.com

More:
How Can Artificial Intelligence Help With Suicidal Ideation? - Theravive

Abortion, immigration and democracy: How do U.S. Senate candidates J.D. Vance and Tim Ryan compare on the iss – cleveland.com

COLUMBUS, Ohio Both Tim Ryan and J.D. Vance have changed their minds on some major political issues since entering public life.

When he entered Congress in the early 2000s, Ryan fit the mold of a particular type of Ohio Democrat that existed back then. He was a pro-gun, anti-abortion Democrat who supported expanding the social net while opposing the war in Iraq.

But like some other Democrats, Ryan has drifted to the left on social issues over the years. He announced support for abortion rights in 2015, and after years of getting strong grades from the National Rifle Association, he gradually came to support gun-control measures, too.

Vance, meanwhile, rose to prominence in 2016 following the publication of his best-selling memoir, Hillbilly Elegy, leveraging the fame into work as a political commentator. Vance publicly described himself as a Never Trump guy in 2016, excoriating the then-presidential candidate for making appeals to racism and xenophobia and referred to Trump privately to a friend in a text message that became public earlier this year as having the potential to be Americas Hitler.

But as a U.S. Senate candidate, Vance now is a full-throated supporter of ex-President Donald Trump, calling him the best president of his lifetime. Hes also become more hardline and populist in his political views, settling on an emerging fusion of nationalism and social conservatism thats become fashionable among some on the political right. Vance found himself defending accusations from Ryan at the Senate candidate debate on Monday that he supported The Great Replacement theory, which supposes that Democrats are encouraging non-white immigrants to strengthen their political power.

Cleveland.com / The Plain Dealer interviewed both candidates, asking them about their shifting views and other issues as part of our coverage comparing the two mens stances. This is the second and final part of our series, which also culls from public statements each have made.

Both are running to replace Republican Sen. Rob Portman, who is retiring at the end of the year. The election will be held on Nov. 8, and early voting began last week.

If you missed our first story, it compared Vance and Ryan on economic issues, energy and the environment, health care, and public safety and gun restrictions.

Consistency

In past election campaigns, Ryan has explained his evolution on social issues, saying his conversations with women caused him to announce he was pro-choice in 2015, and that the shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School in 2012 pushed him toward supporting some new gun restrictions.

More recently, Ryan also has defended himself against criticism from Vance that he tacked to the left during a short-lived run for president in 2019 only to calibrate toward the center as a candidate running statewide in Ohio.

Vances critique involves Ryan describing himself as all-in on natural gas now after suggesting he might ban fracking on federal lands several years ago; criticizing Bidens August executive order forgiving a portion of federally held student debt after Ryan voted for similar measures in 2020; and saying he would support getting rid of gas-powered vehicles from the roads sometime before 2040.

Ryan has disputed being a natural-gas opponent, questioned the timing and other aspects of Bidens student-loan plan and said he is an enthusiastic supporter of the electric-vehicle transition but doesnt want to ban existing cars.

Asked about the general criticism, Ryan pointed out that he argued with Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders during his presidential campaign over Medicare for All. Ryan said imposing it immediately would harm union workers who had bargained away pay increases in favor of better health benefits.

The throughline of my entire career has been whats in the best interest of working-class people, Ryan said. He hasnt been on the forefront of trying to fight for anything other than himself. And Ive been taking the lumps from Bernie Sanders and [House Speaker Nancy] Pelosi. Ive been in the mix trying to do whats right.

Vance, meanwhile, has said he was skeptical of Trump, but he was won over by Trumps policies. This was part of the journey that eventually led to him getting Trumps endorsement, which helped him win a crowded Republican primary in May.

Beyond Trump, Vance also has changed his tune on individual issues, like matter-of-factly describing the climate problem in 2020 while downplaying the severity of the issue more recently. In 2018, Vance expressed support for some form of red flag laws that make it easier for police to seize guns from people deemed to be a safety threat, but more recently called gun restrictions a giant distraction.

In addition, Vance dramatically has changed his general tone as a public figure, shifting from penning an op-ed in 2017 warmly praising ex-President Barack Obama as an admirable man with whom he disagreed, to more recently describing the childless cat ladies he said run the Democratic Party and accusing Biden of intentionally allowing Trump voters to die of drug overdoses.

Explaining some of his hardening viewpoints previously, Vance has said Democrats and progressive social forces have moved sharply to the left in recent years. And in an interview, he said his personal experiences running in elite circles caused him to sour on the people running the country.

If theres been a change in my thinking, I think that its where I used to see a lot of American leadership as well-intentioned, but wrong about some pretty core issues and right about some core issues, I now think that American leadership oscillates between willfully blind and actively corrupt, Vance said.

Abortion / Social issues

Ryan has an across-the-board, generally progressive outlook on social issues, including favoring same-sex marriage and opposing restrictions on abortion. But he has tried to de-emphasize hot-button cultural issues he says are politically divisive and distracting from more core issues.

Asked about participation by transgender athletes in school sports, which Republicans have proposed limiting through a series of bills in Ohio and elsewhere, Ryan explained his general viewpoint.

Most of this stuff needs to be handled by local school districts and local communities and local athletic associations and that kind of thing, but from a federal law standpoint, to me, we need to make sure everyones protected, Ryan said. And we really shouldnt be bullying the most vulnerable people in our society. Like, these are still kids, and theyre vulnerable.

Vance is a social conservative, opposing abortion except in instances to save the life of the mother and praising the U.S. Supreme Court decision voerturning Roe v. Wade. Hes also sharply criticized progressive views on gender.

Pressed on abortion during Mondays debate, Vance declined to spell out other abortion exemptions he might support, calling himself pro-life in principle.

I know people who have been pro-life since before I was born. And one of the things they will tell you is they support an exception in the case of incest... but an incest exception looks different at three weeks of pregnancy versus 39 weeks of pregnancy, Vance said. So I actually dont think that you can say on a debate stage, every single thing that youre going to vote for when it comes to an abortion piece of legislation.

Asked about same-sex marriage, Vance has pointed to the position of the Catholic church, which officially opposes it. During the Oct. 10 candidate debate, Vance said he opposes a bill meant to codify same-sex marriage rights while also saying: Gay marriage is the law of the land in this country. And Im not trying to do anything to change that.

Foreign policy / immigration

There is a major contrast between Ryan and Vance when it comes to foreign policy. Vance is more of an isolationist, critical of American involvement in Ukraine, while Ryan has been a vocal proponent for funding the Ukrainian military.

We have to be very judicious in our in our engagements, but we have to also support freedom-loving countries like Ukraine, Ryan said.

Vance, meanwhile, said the United States has a role to play in the world, whether it be moral or otherwise, and said he admires the resolve of the Ukrainian people.

But Vance fears continued escalation could have catastrophic consequences for the world.

We have to be incredibly cautious about the risks of escalating war, and I think too many of our leaders just dont think about it that way, Vance said.

Both Vance and Ryan call for a tougher stance on China, including the potential to have to defend Taiwan, the politically independent island that China claims is part of the mainland country. Ryan has framed his campaign generally around the need for the U.S. to compete geopolitically with China, leading to some pushback from some Asian-American and progressive circles for veering into xenophobia.

Its not black and white, but if our companies and our business and our military dont have our presence felt in some way, shape or form around the world, China will fill that void, Ryan said.

Vance said he views Taiwan differently than Ukraine, in part since Taiwan is where a huge amount of the computer chips the U.S. relies on are manufactured.

The thing we need to do is get ourselves in a position where we dont have to rely on the Chinese and Taiwanese in the first place, Vance said.

When it comes to immigration, Ryan said he supports comprehensive immigration reform, including tougher border security and a path to citizenship for the roughly 10 million undocumented immigrants currently in the U.S. He says he wants to promote legal immigration, including for refugees, by streamlining the process.

Vance has positioned himself as an immigration hardliner, tying the security situation at the southern border to rising drug addiction levels.

Hes also described undocumented immigrants as a source for cheap labor that keep overall wages down, while also expressing support for promoting immigration for skilled workers his wife is Indian-American whose parents immigrated to the U.S. legally while seeking to lower immigration levels overall.

During his Senate campaign, Vance has described the invasion at the southern border, and in his political ads from the Republican primary campaign, accused Democratic leaders of supporting leniency on the border to help secure their political power by attracting new voters.

Vance has described what he says are efforts from Democratic leaders to replace American voters by granting legal status to undocumented immigrants. This has led to criticism that his views are similar to the explicitly racist Great Replacement Theory.

During a fiery exchange in Mondays debate, Vance said the criticism offends him, especially given that his three young children are biracial.

Its disgusting and Ive never endorsed it. Its such an unbelievable accusation, Tim. To believe in a border, Tim Ryan thinks Ive endorsed the Great Replacement Theory, Vance said on Monday.

Vance also blasted Ryan for supporting amnesty for people in the country illegally and blamed him for the widely covered rape of a 10-year-old girl that led her to get an abortion in Indiana, since the alleged rapist is an undocumented immigrant.

Voting / democracy

In Congress, Ryan voted for the Voting Rights Act, a sweeping bill that would expand early voting and voting by mail nationally; require states to automatically register people to vote and to offer online voter-registration options; as well as strengthen federal rules for disclosure and enforcement in political spending.

The bill is backed by voting-rights groups, although Republican critics have called it an overreach into how states run elections.

Using the filibuster rule, Republicans have blocked the bill in the Senate, where Democrats hold a light majority, but where at least 60 votes are needed to pass most legislation. Ryan said he supports ending the filibuster, saying it contributes to gridlock, even if it means it will make it easier for Republicans to pass legislation in the future.

Vance, meanwhile, has called for an end to early voting and opposes ending the filibuster. Hes also among the Republicans who called the 2020 presidential election into question.

Republican criticism of the election ranges on a spectrum from false and conspiratorial such as Trumps contention that widespread fraud, possibly aided by hacked voting machines, caused him to lose to more specific, such as criticizing Facebook and other social media companies for suppressing a negative New York Post story about Hunter Biden close to the election, or raising concerns after Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg granted $300 million for elections administration in 2020 to battleground states across the country, including in Ohio.

Vance has run the gamut, telling the Youngstown Vindicator in October 2021 that he thinks there probably was significant voter fraud in Ohio, even though Ohio elections officials, including Republican Secretary of State Frank LaRose, whom Vance has endorsed, have said for years that fraudulent votes are almost non-existent.

More recently, Vance has fallen more into the latter camp.

There are many arguments we can make, but heres the thing that I think made the election fundamentally a problem in 2020, Vance recently told the USA Today Ohio Bureau. Its not foreign people hacking into the voting machines and changing Biden votes into Trump votes or Trump votes into Biden votes. Its the influence of the technology industry on the election.

Ryan also has harshly condemned Trump and his supporters who stormed the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, and tried to prevent the presidential election from being certified. He has praised the work of the House Committee investigating the attack as a necessary fact-finding mission.

We should figure out whats going on. And I do think that the insurrection was a group of people who are trying to overthrow the United States of America. And I think they were trying to stop the peaceful transition of power from President Trump to President Biden and disenfranchise over 80 million of our fellow citizens, Ryan saids during Mondays debate.

Vance, meanwhile, has downplayed the events. In a social media video he posted the week of Jan. 6, 2022, he mocked the significance of the riot, criticized the Jan. 6 committee as conducting a show trial, raised money for criminal defendants charged for their role in the riot and said Republicans instead should form a committee to aggressively investigate the national social unrest in 2020 after the death of George Floyd instead.

It goes back to four years ago, Vance said during Mondays debate. The obsession with the idea that Donald Trump somehow had the election stolen by the Russians. Theres been a nonstop political effort to not honor the election of 2016. And I think thats just as much of a threat to democracy as the violence on January the Sixth.

Follow this link:
Abortion, immigration and democracy: How do U.S. Senate candidates J.D. Vance and Tim Ryan compare on the iss - cleveland.com

Neurodiversity Emerges as a Skill in Artificial Intelligence Work – BNN Bloomberg

(Bloomberg) -- Staring closely at the screen, Jordan Wright deftly picks out a barely distinguishable shape with his mouse, bringing to life a stark blue outline from a blur of overexposed features.

Its a process similar to the automated tests that teach computers to distinguish humans from machines, by asking someone to identify traffic lights or stop signs in a picture known as a Captcha.

Only in Wrights case, the shape turns out to be of a Tupolev Tu-160, a supersonic strategic heavy bomber, parked on a Russian base. The outline one of hundreds a day he picks out from satellite imagesis training an algorithm so a US intelligence agency can locate and identify Moscows firepower in an automated flash.

Its become a run-of-the-mill task for the 25-year-old, who describes himself as on the autism spectrum. Starting in the spring, Wright began working atEnabled Intelligence, a Virginia-based startup that works largely for US intelligence and other federal agencies. Foundedin 2020, itspecializes in labeling, training and testing the sensitive digital data on which artificial intelligence depends.

Peter Kant, chief executive officer of Enabled Intelligence, said he was inspired to start the company after reading about an Israeli program to recruit people with autism for cyber-intelligence work. Therepetitive,detailedwork of training artificial intelligence algorithms relies on pattern recognition, puzzle-solving and deep focus that is sometimes a particular strength of autistic workers, he said.

Enabled Intelligences main type ofwork, known as data annotation, is usually farmed out to technically skilled but far cheaper labor forces in countries including China, Kenya andMalaysia. Thats not an option for US government agencies whose data is sensitive or classified, Kant said, adding that morethan half hisworkforce of 25 areneurodiverse.

I can easily say this is the best opportunity I've got in my life, said Wright, who grew up with an infatuation for military aviation, dropped out of college and has since experienced long stints of unemployment in between poorly paid work. Most recently, he baggedfrozen groceries.

For decades, workers with developmental disabilities, especially autism, have faced discrimination and disproportionately high unemployment levels. A large shortfall in cybersecurity jobs, along with a new push for workplace acceptance and flexibility in part spurred by the Covid-19 pandemic has started to focus attention onthe abilities of people who think and work differently.

Enabled Intelligence has adjusted its work rules to accommodate its employees, ditching resumes and interviews for online assessmentsand staggering work hours for those who find it hard to get in early. It has built three new areas for classified material and hopes to secure government clearances for much of its neurodiverse workforce something the US intelligence community has sometimes struggled to accommodate in the past.Pay starts at $20 an hour,in line with industry standards, and the company provideshealth insurance, paid leave and a path for promotion. Enabled Intelligenceexpects to make revenues of $2 millionthis year and double thatnext year, along with doubling its workforce.

The US intelligence community has been slow to catch on to the opportunity, critics say. It falls short of the 12% federal target for workforce representation of persons with disabilities, according to the latest statistics out this month. Until this year, it has also regularly fallen short of the 2% federal target for persons with targeted disabilities, which include those with autism.

In other countries its old hat, said Teresa Thomas, program lead for neurodiverse talent enablement at MITRE, which operates federally funded research and development centers. She citeswell established programs in Denmark, Israel, the UK and Australia, where one state recently appointed a minister for autism.

Thomas has recently spearheaded a new neurodiverse federal workforce pilot to establish a template for the US government to hire and support autistic workers, but so far only one of the countrys 18 intelligence agencies, the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency, known asNGA,has participated.Now the federal governmentscyberdefense agency, the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency,intends to undertake a similar pilot.

Stephanie La Rue, chief of diversity, equity and inclusion for the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, told Bloomberg the US intelligence community needs to acknowledge that its not where we need to bewhen it comes to employing people with disabilities.

Its like turning the Titanic, said La Rue, adding that NGAs four-person pilot would be reviewed and shared with the wider intelligence community as a promising practice. Change is going to be incremental.

Research indicated that neurodiverse intelligence officers on the autism spectrum exhibit the ability to parse large data sets and identify patterns and trends at rates that far exceed folks who are not autistic and were less prone to cognitive bias, La Rue said.Yet securing a clearance to access classified information can still present an additional challenge, according to some observers.

If an office wall board at Enabled Intelligenceis any indication, experiencesvary. There, 18 anonymous handwritten notesanswer the question: What does neurodiversity mean to you?

Difficult. Trying. Its held me back a lot, says one in an uncertain script. Strength,answers a second in careful cursive. A third, in capital letters, declares: SUPERPOWERS.

2022 Bloomberg L.P.

Original post:
Neurodiversity Emerges as a Skill in Artificial Intelligence Work - BNN Bloomberg