iStock According to a recent Gartner survey, despite the disruption caused by the global COVID-19 pandemic, 47% of artificial intelligence (AI) investments were unchanged, while 30% of organizations planned to increase them. A recent Intel survey of healthcare decision-makers found 84% were using or planning to use AI – nearly double the number from before the pandemic – with predictive analytics for early intervention (94%), clinical decision support (92%) and collaboration across multiple specialists to improve patient care (92%) the top use cases. Early in 2020, nearly 100% of educators polled by MIT said AI would be instrumental to their institution’s competitiveness within the next three years, and in the wake of the pandemic, institutions were turning to AI to help them personalize content, help keep students engaged, detect cheating on tests and more.