The Gwangju Employers Federation hosted the 1709th Friday Breakfast Forum on the 16th, inviting AI expert Dr. Moonho Park. Provided by Gwangju Employers Federation
The Gwangju Employers Federation announced on the 16th that it had hosted the 1709th Friday Breakfast Forum, inviting AI (artificial intelligence) expert Dr. Moonho Park.
The forum was held on the third floor convention hall of Holiday Inn Gwangju Hotel on the same day. At the event, the chairman of the public interest incorporated association "Park Moonho's World of Natural Science" delivered a lecture on the theme of "Future Management and AI: What Leaders, Not Technology, Must Change."
The main lecture covered the following topics: ▲Where Are We Now? The Era of the "Cognitive Revolution" Beyond the Fourth Industrial Revolution ▲AI Is Not Electricity, but a Second Brain ▲Why Leaders, Not Technology, Matter ▲How to View AI ▲AI as a Great Teacher ▲How the Essential Value of Our Business Should Evolve in the AI Era ▲AI Solves the HOW, Leaders Decide the WHY. In particular, Dr. Park pointed out that there are 610,000 small and medium-sized manufacturing companies in Korea, but the AI adoption rate in manufacturing processes is only 1%. According to the Ministry of SMEs and Startups' AX Strategy, the goal is to raise this to 10% by 2030.
Dr. Park holds a Ph.D. in Electrical Engineering from Texas A&M University and is well known for his lectures such as "How to Study Well Even with a Poor Memory" on "Park Moonho TV." He has served as co-chair of the Baekbooks reading community and has received the Korea Science and Technology Map Author Award and the Korea Science Culture Award. His major publications include "The Brain: Emergence of Thought," "Dr. Park Moonho's Big History Study," and "Everything About Neuroscience in Pictures," among many others.
Yang Jinseok, Chairman of the Gwangju Employers Federation, stated, "The adoption of AI and the ability to respond to technological changes, along with political and regulatory risks, are considered the greatest challenges in global business management. This has raised the need to transition to AI-native organizations, which is why we invited an expert on AI."
© The Asia Business Daily(www.asiae.co.kr). All rights reserved.

