AI Trends on TED
Last Updated on July 9, 2024 by Editorial Team
Author(s): GaryGeo
Originally published on Towards AI.
Introduction: The AI Zeitgeist Through the TED Lens
If you are like me, you turn to TED videos to satisfy your curiosity or to be educated on innovative ideas. In recent years, I have regularly watched their Artificial Intelligence videos to learn more about AIβs capabilities, potential, and risks. Almost every week, I notice a new TED AI video on my YouTube homepage, which inspired me to do some digging. There are over 550 AI-themed TED videos dating back to 2007!
The dataset, interactive app and YouTube playlist at the end of the article.
As I started to explore TEDβs rich library of content, it dawned on me that these conversations are a window into how AI technology and adoption is evolving. With this in mind I started my most extensive data analysis project to date, to give some structure and track the TED trends. I used the YouTube videos as my source, a little LLM, and a lot of Python to build a knowledge graph and started analyzing. This article is about the analysis, not the graph, but follow me for a future article about the build.
The Evolution of AI on TED
My first step in the analysis was to better understand the video publishing trends over time. Using this dataset as a foundation I started to investigate what was the βstoryβ behind these trends.
Early Days: Visionaries and Pioneers (2007β2015)
In the mid-2000s, when AI was still a niche topic for most, TED was already featuring talks by visionaries like Ray Kurzweil, known for his work on βThe Singularity,β and Jeff Hawkins of Palm Computing fame. IBMβs Jeopardy playing Watson, launching in 2011, was the biggest AI story of the time. During this period, AI discussions were sporadic, appearing occasionally but not consistently every year.
It is also notable that TEDx events were already in the thousands by 2012 (source: Forbes), so either the content was not focused on AI, or these videos were not published on YouTube (or are now archived)
The Tipping Point (2016β2017)
Based on the dataset, a shift began in 2016β2017, marked by an increase in AI coverage. DeepMindβs AlphaGo was mastering Go, not by memorization, but by creating its own new strategies that beat the Go masters, such as its victory over world champion Lee Sedol in 2016.
At the same time TEDx events were spreading (with over 100,000 talks by 2017 β source: TED Blog) and the topic of AI intrigued many of the new community-based presenters.
The Deep Learning Boom (2017β2019)
The increase in AI-related TED talks during 2017β2019 resulted from several factors converging at once. This period saw advances in deep learning and neural networks research and at the same time, companies/venture capitalists increased their investments in AI startups. Data Science became a popular career choice, and Big Data was a hot topic. AI technologies also reached the top of Gartnerβs Hype Cycle for Emerging Technologies, reflecting high public interest and high expectations.
These factorsβββtech progress, more funding, growing expertise, and public excitementβββled to more AI discussions at TED talks. People were seeing how AI would impact different aspects of society and industry. TED became a forum for exploring this AI shift as it happened.
The Pandemic Interlude (2020β2021)
During 2020β2021, much of the focus on TEDβs main channel shifted to healthcare, remote work, and the social impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic. AI was not the main topic but was an undercurrent in the discussions about technological solutions to pandemic-related challenges.
The ChatGPT Era (Late 2022-Present)
ChatGPT-3βs release in late 2022 sparked renewed interest in AI, especially in Large Language Models (LLMs). Throughout 2023 and 2024, AI and LLMs have taken center stage at TED. Presenters have covered a wide range of topics, from the technologyβs capabilities and opportunities to its societal impacts and potential risks.
And to no oneβs surprise, TED is not alone. A snapshot from Google Trends shows the impact of AI on search is even more dramatic. Interest in AI experienced a parabolic shift and is only now stabilizing at levels 10x what they were before ChatGPT.
The volume and publishing cadence of the videos tell part of the story, now letβs see what we can extrapolate from the videos themselves.
What Can We Learn from the Video Data
Next we will dig into the content of this collection of YouTube transcripts and metadata. My analysis involved extracting key concepts (topics, people, organizations, etc.) as well as categorizing the videos to build a knowledge graph. With this we can learn about the categories, people and organizations that dominate the TED AI video and also provide insights into the general zeitgeist of Artificial Intelligence.
Key Categories
AI is a general-purpose technology, much like electricity or the Internet, with the potential to achieve significant results across a wide range of applications. This diversity is reflected in the categories and topics in the video dataset. AI has the potential to impact various areas of life, including business, society, healthcare, education, work, art, entertainment, and more. Alongside these emerging applications, we also see videos addressing a broad set of concerns, including ethics, governance, safety, and security.
In terms of distribution, the TED catalog is actually very balanced across these two extremes. Applying AI to business and industry is a major focus of the TED catalog, with 126 videos dedicated to this category. However, this focus is balanced by a significant number of videos addressing societal impacts (113) and AI ethics and governance (99). The pattern continues with substantial categories focused on healthcare (63) and education (55), balanced by concerns about the future of work (36). As we move into the smaller categories, this pattern of balance persists. Overall, about 55% of the videos primarily focus on opportunity topics, and 45% focus on more risk-related topics.
The fact that opportunities and risks weigh evenly in TED presentations mirrors the dilemma we face as a society β what will it cost us to embrace the potential of AI?
Influential People
Now letβs move on to what can be learned about AI by examining the individuals mentioned in these TED videos. Key individuals frequently mentioned in the videos fall into three categories:
- Technical Thought Leaders: Known for their pioneering contributions and thought leadership in AI (e.g., Alan Turing, Stephen Hawking, Ray Kurzweil, Marvin Minsky).
- Business Leaders: Visionaries in the business world who have significantly influenced the adoption and application of AI/Technology (e.g., Elon Musk, Bill Gates, Mark Zuckerberg, Steve Jobs).
- Expert Reference Points: Masters in their fields who have been profoundly impacted by AI advancements (e.g., Garry Kasparov in chess, Lee Sedol in Go, Michelangelo in art).
While many of these names are well-known, there were a few that I had to research, with the larger list feeling almost like a βwhoβs whoβ in AI quiz.
More so than the abstract trends and concepts, understanding the individuals in AI helps to give a broader context to what we see in the video library. This AI moment is historical, and these individuals will be an important part of that history.
Leading Organizations
Organizations also play an important role, and while I donβt think the list of most referenced organizations will surprise anyone, it does highlight key shifts over the 17 years of TED videos.
- Google is mentioned almost twice as often as the next organization, even considering their DeepMind acquisition as a separate entity.
- OpenAI has rapidly gained prominence, despite being a relative newcomer.
- MIT and Stanford are the leading academic institutions for AI research and development.
- IBM, Amazon, and Meta have been minimally referenced in this latest LLM wave, and over 80% of their mentions happened before 2022.
Organizations have much more inertia than individuals, and I think we will continue to see Google, Microsoft, MIT, Amazon, etc., for many more years. That is not to say there will not be upstarts like OpenAI , but it is far more likely their star will fade or they get consumed (e.g. DeepMindβs acquisition by Google). For this trend, our 17 year window might not be enough.
Conclusion
These TED Talks serve as a window into the AI revolution, reflecting its journey from a niche subject to a transformative force in our society. This analysis leverages video content to provide insight into AI technology trends, societal opportunities and risks, and the individuals and companies driving its emergence.
As AI continues to evolve, TED videos will remain valuable resources for understanding its potential, challenges, and the critical conversations surrounding its development and implementation. While these individual presenters and videos are incredibly powerful on their own, analyzing them in aggregate reveals trends that enhance our broader understanding.
The story of AI is still in its early chapters, and it will be fascinating to see how these trends evolve and what new topics emerge in this dynamic field.
Resources to Explore Further
Data Call-Outs
The goal of the dataset is to be directional and insightful. I believe it achieves this, but alas it is not perfect.
- The video playlist contains videos published through May 2024. As a result many of the charts have full year data for other years and partial for 2024.
- This playlist was manually generated, by myself. I may have made errors or applied judgment on what to include inconsistently⦠I did my best.
- There are other TED Videos published that are not on the YouTube channel, so this playlist and dataset is incomplete.
- The playlist includes all of the TED channels in this analysis. By including all of these channels, we can get a broader cross-section of what people are interested in sharing and discussing. The main TED channel features videos from the official TED conference and TEDx videos that have been promoted to the main channel. TEDx actually has many more videos, as it comes from numerous community-organized events. There is also a TED-Ed channel, which focuses on educational content. Lastly a seemingly inactive TED Institute channel that was more corporate-focused.
- The extractions and category assignments were done with OpenAI ChatGPT-4o. There can be inconsistencies and errors.
- While not a focus of this analysis, the YouTube stats (Views, Likes, Comment, etc) were updated at the beginning of July 2024. There is an inconsistency with YouTube metrics in that a video published months or years before another video has had more time to accumulate, the Views, Likes, and Comments. Since the last video was added at the end of May, there was at least a one-month period for the video statistics to accumulate
Methodology
Below is the general methodology I used in conducting this analysis. I plan to do a separate article on the process and techniques in the future (follow me to learn more).
- Identified YouTube and established a playlist of relevant videos thru ~June 1, 2024
- Used APIs and Python to gather both YouTube metadata and transcripts.
- Processed the data in a Python notebook, including transcript summarization, concept extraction, and categorization. This was done with the OpenAI API (i.e. LLMs).
- The results were stored in a knowledge graph comprising over 3,500 nodes and 11,000 relationships.
- Manually reviewed the captured nodes and relationships to remove issues/errors, and merge similar concepts (Stanford vs Stanford University, etc).
- Created datasets useful for analysis (e.g., video count by year/channel, video count by person, etc) then created visualizations.
- As a side effort I loaded this knowledge graph data into a JSON file for the web app.
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Published via Towards AI