live event

Augmenting Human Creativity with AI

Featuring Dr. Peter Stone, Professor of Computer Science at UT Austin and Chief AI Scientist at SonyAI, and Greg Shove, Section CEO

September 25, 2024

2-3 p.m. ET

Thank you!
You’ll receive a confirmation email at the address you provided shortly.
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.

Is AI cheapening our art or making us better artists?

By now we’ve all seen the quote – I want AI to do my laundry and dishes so that I can do art and writing, not for AI to do my art and writing so that I can do my laundry and dishes

Dr. Peter Stone, Professor of Computer Science at UT Austin and Chief Scientist of Sony AI, says that could be getting more possible. Join him and Greg Shove for a 1-hour fireside chat on September 25 from 2-3 p.m. ET, where they’ll discuss questions like:

– What is AI’s place in the creation of art?

– How can AI help us spend more time in a flow state?

– How can data for training and evaluating AI models be collected in a more ethical way?

– Will AI in art just lead to more low quality content – or could it actually make us better?

MEET YOUR SPEAKER

Dr. Peter Stone

Peter Stone is a Professor of Computer Science and Director of the Artificial Intelligence Lab at UT Austin. He is also the Chief Scientist at Sony AI tasked with pushing the boundaries of AI while ensuring ethical considerations stay at the forefront.

MEET YOUR SPEAKER

Greg Shove

Greg Shove is the CEO of Section and a six-time startup CEO. He is the founder of Machine + Partners, an AI consultancy helping companies deploy AI products. His mission is to get 100,000 students into "the AI class" by 2025.

MEET YOUR SPEAKER

Dr. Peter Stone

Peter Stone is a Professor of Computer Science and Director of the Artificial Intelligence Lab at UT Austin. He is also the Chief Scientist at Sony AI tasked with pushing the boundaries of AI while ensuring ethical considerations stay at the forefront.

RSVP NOW

Our Promise

Unboring business education you can use immediately

No bad PowerPoints, cheesy ukulele music, mandatory quizzes to prove you were watching, smart-but-super-boring professors, or un-diverse panels. Ever.

100 sticky