Thinking beyond human capabilities: Complexity, AI, and the Future of Food Part 2
Plants have secret intelligence humans can’t perceive. Discover how biomimicry and bee vision are revolutionizing agricultural AI.
Plants have secret intelligence humans can’t perceive. Discover how biomimicry and bee vision are revolutionizing agricultural AI.
Given the connection between AI and nature, it’s worth exploring how AI can help solve one of the greatest practical challenges facing agriculture: food security.
To compete against such savvy players on the world stage, the US must move beyond the stockpile mentality and elevate concern for food security to address our current vulnerabilities.
Instead of allowing a scientific approach to growing food, Europe has withdrawn its technology, dense capital investment and fertile soil from the global effort to achieve a long-term food security solution. As the European Union is the world’s top exporter of food products, this is a major setback that the world can’t afford.
The revolutionary quest to build a better pint that began in a Dublin brewery at the dawn of the 20th century, will continue to play a key role in ensuring future generations won’t go hungry in the century ahead.
The power of AI is how it can democratize expertise, lowering the barriers to entry for tasks that once could only be performed by specialists.
Future success of U.S. growers depends upon making the most of farm data.
Our successful development and deployment of a genetic gain metric is an important advance for both Syngenta and the entire agricultural industry.
They put a great deal of thought and contemplation into a very complex problem, and then solved it systematically.
Published 8/8/2017 | Updated on 4/2/2025 Published on Michigan Farm News (Joseph Byrum) Machines began replacing humans in agriculture quite