Paving the way for innovations that were once out of reach, artificial intelligence (AI) is expected to be a general-purpose technology, just like the steam engine, electricity and electronics in past industrial revolutions. In the space of just a few years, AI has extended into sectors as diverse as transport, telecommunications, healthcare, education, justice and safety. In a field involving such colossal investment costs, French and European decision makers must have a detailed understanding of the comparative advantages enjoyed by their own country and its competitors in AI-related fields in order to target specific investments that will allow them to make the necessary quantitative effort to expand their market share in key sectors.

Ludovic Dibiaggio
Professor of Innovation Management, SKEMA Business School
Ludovic Dibiaggio is a Professor of Innovation Management at SKEMA Business School. He is the Director of the Knowledge, Technology and Organisation (KTO) research centre at SKEMA, an Associate Researcher at GREDEG (Research Group in Law, Economics and Management) and Director of OTESIA (Observatory of the Technological, Economic and Social Impacts of Artificial Intelligence). His research focusses on studying the conditions and factors that foster innovation as well as its effects on organisations and countries in industrial contexts associated with semiconductors, biotechnology, fuel cells and artificial intelligence.