Publishing practices around the world indicate that marketing alone does not lead to the sale of millions of copies of a given title. There is more to it. Created by Matthew L. Jockers, the Stanford Literary Lab focuses on text analysis in the belief that computers can read books in a way that is not accessible to humans. This is where artificial intelligence comes in, and its appearance in our everyday lives still raises many controversies and questions.
On this occasion, we recorded a film from the series – What did you not know about AI in the publishing industry or were you afraid to ask 😊
Krzysztof Sopyła, CEO of Ermlab Software, talks about how it happens that artificial intelligence reads books, how it works, and what data and information it is able to obtain while “reading” a book.
Watching the movie you will also find out:
- Can artificial intelligence make life easier for publishers?
- What machine learning models are used in text analysis?
- Who deals with data interpretation and analysis?
- Why are literary scholars needed when working with AI?
- Will artificial intelligence replace humans soon?
- What are NERY?
- Can AI help promote a book?
- How to provide the content of the book as a vector?
- And above all, are AI activities safe?
We invite you to watch!