Technology
Practical AI with Derek Crager - Artificial Intelligence: Real Talk
In this episode of Transformative Principle, host Jethro Jones interviews Derek D.C. Crager, an advocate for making artificial intelligence accessible to neurodiverse individuals. They discuss how AI ...
Practical AI with Derek Crager - Artificial Intelligence: Real Talk
Technology •
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Welcome to Transformative Principle. I am very excited to have on the program today Derek D.C.
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Crayger. He is a passionate advocate for making artificial intelligence approachable and accessible,
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particularly for individuals within the neurodiverse community.
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Ask someone who is autistic, Derek has dedicated himself to fostering a supportive environment where
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people with autism ADHD, dyslexia, can leverage AI to enhance their skills and income.
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There is work at practical AI. He emphasizes clarity and support,
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ensuring that users can navigate AI without being overwhelmed by complexities.
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He's got a great history and this wonderful community, practical AI that you can read
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a little bit more about on the show notes at transformativeprinciple.org.
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Derek D.C., you prefer D.C., so we'll go with D.C. Excuse me, I keep saying Derek.
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Welcome to Transformative Principle.
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Well, thank you, Jethro. And honestly, anything is fine. Derek in a crowded room, people
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hear Darrell and Eric and anything else, but yeah, my name is Derek. D.C. Either one I
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respond to, so thank you. Excellent. Well, great to have you here. Talk to me a little bit about
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this idea of using AI, particularly with neurodiverse people. What's the difference for someone
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who's neurodiverse as opposed to just any regular Joe off the street? Well, I think the experience
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is different because our histories are different. If we to throw a couple of terms out here,
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you know, neurodiversity on one side and neurotypical on the other, the neurotypical is that category.
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We throw the traditionally average people to, you know, air quotes here, quote-unquote average,
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but normative, I guess, is a better way to put it. Average, joy, sounds like an insult, so
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what it's applied to humans. But yeah, the experience coming in with AI is that it gives us someone
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to talk to and connecting through a human level is important. And I'm even talking beyond, you know,
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keystrokes and clicks. It's if we can get to that human conversation with AI, and that's one thing
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I do with with my company, both on the profit and the nonprofit side is I built a voice interface
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to emulate this patient supportive anthropomorphized AI that sounds like a human. So I think that's
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important to get through the psychological barrier. But either way, those of us that are on
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a spectrum or considered neurodivergent, we have honestly a rough history. We are the lowest
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employment rate when it comes to employment statistics. And a lot of times we do good things,
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but we can't explain them well, so that means we don't connect to the social. So AI allows us to
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speak with ourselves in a manner. There's multiple platforms out there, whether it be notebook,
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LAM, or a GenGPT project or perplexity spaces, those are just three I've topped my head that
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allow us to create a diary for ourselves and be able to talk to ourselves. So in that manner,
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it's those of us that are ADHD, we're either at 50,000 feet or we're deep in the weeds and
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nowhere in between. So I know it allows me to what I'm deep in the weeds to talk to myself through
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the AI interface and say, hey, give me a broad view because I'm stuck on something or even just
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the opposite. If I'm at the 50,000 viewpoint and my mind's going everywhere racing and I can't
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get into the weeds or I can't identify the top five or the top 10 or what are the highlights,
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I can ask myself through this AI front end diary to elicit those items. So it's a way to
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get advice from ourselves and especially we won't have the fear of asking a human.
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I mean, in school, one of the first things we always hear at the beginning of the year,
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there are no dumb questions type of things, but even still those of us that are on the spectrum
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of some sort, we've heard that and we still get experience that our questions are done. So we
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refrain even deeper and go on our show. Yeah, that makes total sense. And in working with my own
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daughter on this kind of stuff, she sometimes doesn't have the capacity to articulate the question
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that she's asking. And so for example, this morning at breakfast, she was asking a question
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and we couldn't understand what she was asking as she was trying to refer to something in the past
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and instead of saying, last Christmas, she said last week. And so then we were more confused about
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that situation. And there's this paper that came out recently called Your Brain on Chat GPT
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Cognitive Debt. And this idea of cognitive debt has really been weighing heavily on me in that
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the paper proposed that essentially people who use Chat GPT to do things that they are taking on
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cognitive debt. But in reading that paper and starting to understand some aspects of it,
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I believe that Chat GPT actually provides cognitive equity for some people because it gives them
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an ability to do the things that typically get in trouble, cause them trouble in their day-to-day
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communication. So for example, for my daughter to put together complex words and phrases can be
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very challenging, but she can get the base idea down. And so using Chat GPT actually enables her to
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have a voice where she didn't have a voice before because it helps her explain things where she's
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just getting the highlights and it helps explain them and fill in the gaps. Does that make sense?
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What do you see with that kind of an approach? Oh, that's a word definitely an alignment on this.
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It's what is there depending on the research? There's 30,000 or 60,000 words in the English language
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and a typical human, you know, we're walking around with five, maybe 6,000 words. So your word for
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something may be different than my word for something and we write this all sometimes as cultural.
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And yeah, the culture has a certain connection to it and the reason why some way might call
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a Calcute One Place that the Davenport and some play sells, if we don't know there's that translation,
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then yeah, we're like, what is a Davenport? And so yeah, the way your family speak, it's the same
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way for your daughter, I picture that and first of all, I want to preface this by saying that
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anybody on the neurodiverse spectrum in that neurodiversity group, just because we have
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diagnosed with the same professional diagnosis with whatever that might be, that does not mean that
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we're the same as somebody else sitting next to us with that same diagnosis. I think that's very
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important to understand. That's something that I didn't even understand until 10 years ago.
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And so there's something that Dr. Nancy Doyle came up with. She's a doctor out of the UK and she
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built this community called Genius Within and she talks about what is neurodiversity and she identifies
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the spiky profile and to her the spiky profile is that it's like an xy graph and we plot out our skill
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sets and the neuro-typical people in the world, they're like a plus one to a minus one or a zero
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all the way across, but they come out to be that average. There's that word again average,
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but that's normal. And so for those of us that are neurodiverse, we might be a 10 where
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the neuro-typicals are a one, but to balance that, we might be a minus 10 where a neuro-typicals
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a one and that plus 10 might be in our creativity. It could be building something, it could be our
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analytical mind and then maybe we come up with something great for a company or a school or a
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project or for mom and dad and then we try to explain it and so like your daughter is trying to
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explain maybe we're a minus 10 and because we lack the control over the words and to some of that,
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it really that lack of control over the words is the interface with the rest of humanity or humankind
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and if that's our only method of communication and it sounds like whoever's trying to communicate
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is ignorant or they lack the knowledge where sometimes it's just the opposite. Sometimes there are
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so many things going on in that mind that they might know 10 words for that topic and they're just
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going to throw one out at you because their gears are turning so fast, they're just spitting to put
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the language together and in their mind, their mind is running so fast that they're thinking about
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10 things ahead of the conversation. So to put them in a scenario where they have to stop, you know,
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smell the roses, that the fray, there are all kinds of phrasing in life that we pick up, you know,
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take a minute, take a heartbeat, type of things, live in the present. For those of us with our minds,
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where the gears are going, it's very easy to use words that our conversation partners don't
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understand. So it is very much like a interpretation needed and chat GPT does offer that definitely.
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Well yeah, and that's something that's really interesting. I like that genius within approach because
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in my daughter's situation, she may be a minus 10 in a whole bunch of areas and then a plus 10 in
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only one area. And you know, when we talk about this, we often talk like we're really good in one
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area that makes up for the deficit in another area, but it may be that we're negative in a lot of
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areas as it relates to what is typical and what is normal. And that makes it really difficult to
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assimilate and participate in our modern economy and the things that we do on a day to day basis in
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our society, that can make it really challenging. And one of those things is being able to read, for
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example, even, you know, with all this stuff around AI, so much of it is text-based. And so
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you mentioned having a voice interface that helps. And then you also mentioned the idea of this
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patient, infinitely patient thing that can deal with the millions of questions that are asked. And
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and that is exactly something that that I've seen with with neurodiverse, diverse folks that I've
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worked with that they have a lot of questions and ask them repeatedly and constantly. Even when
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we already have determined that these things are the case and happening, they still come back to
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these questions often. And so having something that is infinitely patient can be a really powerful
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support for someone. And so my question then with with these contexts in place, how how do you do it
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so that the the AI is actually beneficial for the person and that it is attuned to what it is that
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they need and that it can help them in their specific use case. Oh, certainly. It's that's an
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important distinction because we hear and we read of the headlines that talk about AI being
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inaccurate or hallucinating, etc. So we have our special sauce on the back end of our model.
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And our model is is set up where we take the knowledge domain whatever that knowledge domain is.
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So we compartmentalize a specific knowledge. For example, let's say seventh grade science.
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Maybe we take the seventh grade science book and we digest that into a database, you know,
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vector databases, a cool term to throw around. But we digest that into a database. We have an AI
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in the back end that interprets the data and then we have that transition point. We have a different
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large language model on the front end to interface between the human and the at the back end.
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And so it's really about can put in the knowledge in a container and allowing our AI to speak
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to and from that knowledge domain. No, where else? So we put guardrails on it. And so the conversation
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when we're talking to it is very much like speaking to somebody that is on the spectrum
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because we set this up as a subject matter expert, this SME in a box. And it talks
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add infinitum on that subject. But if you ask it about, you know, curly fries at RVs, it's probably
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not going to be the answer, yeah. And it versus the public domain tools that are out there,
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you're just going to get the first answer that comes up. That's really a CHGPT's model is to just
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return an answer. So yeah, that's it's important that we stick to the quality of the data.
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And we increase the accuracy of the conversation by limiting our interface with just that specific data.
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So how does this work then in a situation where there is, you know, let's say we need this to be a
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helper for navigating the community, for example. And someone doesn't have the language skills to
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get out there, but they can text and then can the AI then be their voice and say, I want to go to
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this place and it will communicate that for them. What kinds of situations where
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exists, where you can do more than just teach a subject, but can also help them navigate
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an environment or a conversation or a relationship.
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Yeah, well, that's that's ideal. And that's really our forte. That's that's where we thrive is
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is going beyond just the steps because we can have a list of ingredients on a recipe and it tells us
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how to bake muffins, but that doesn't mean that that index card can tell us what to do if our
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oven is oversized or it's out of whack or we're missing an ingredient. And then in the in the
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how about this? If we have our earbuds in and we're listening to our map, let's say Google map
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that's walking around town. So that would be similar to the scenario you're talking about in a
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straight how to get there, but you can't ask Google maps is you know the roads blocked or the
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bridge is washed out. I mean they've got some work around in there, but it's not conversational.
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Whereas if they were if your daughter was speaking to you over the telephone, she has her backpack
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on or earbuds in and she's talking to dad and she says, hey dad I got down here and I can see
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the McDonald's across the way, but the bridge is washed out. Then dad was like, oh yeah, yeah,
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just go down to first street, take a right and that's the work around. And that's a very simplified
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version of of what our AI is doing right now, conversational. So any place that a human can be
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and offer mentorship, that is that's the domain we're covering right now. We're not trying to be
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all things to all people, but in that scenario, we take the topic and we are working on
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business side, we have school side and specific topics, but also I learned when I I'm not a
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certified teacher, I'll say that to the crowd here, but I know that there's shortage of teachers. So
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in in what time I have to spare, I volunteer at the local as a substitute teacher and I found out
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that depending on the school system, you have adults that shop around or mentor in individual
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students, one-on-one throughout the day. They walk around with them, they go with them, they help
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interpret, like we discussed a little bit ago, and they help interface and they help
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that day go better for that student. So everybody can learn in the school system without
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disrupting the class. So that's a lot of money. If we had one adult for every student, I mean,
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we'd have we wouldn't have 25 to one teacher to student ratios, right? So if we had that
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economic capability, we'd be supporting the teachers much better. So with this, with this, and I
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saw this a couple years ago and started my mind turning on this, in your scenario, can we give
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somebody this virtual mentor that they can carry around with them? And it's not even a visual
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handicap at this point. So it does have separate them and called them out for being different.
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Oh, you got the human walking with you. It's in their ear and they can say, hey, I'm going to
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math class and I really have trouble with math and I don't know where to start. I don't know
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how to talk to the teacher about it. Can you talk me through this? And in a very supporting
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caring way, it will say, hey, try this. And then depending on the knowledge that is contained,
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there's different scenarios that it will walk the student through on how to connect. We could
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have that knowledge programmed with, you know, this is my locker combination, I forgot.
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And then I was listening to your episode last week with you and Damon talking about software.
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And I think it was Damon that was going into, we have this knowledge loss when a teacher leaves
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and the teacher takes all that knowledge of the student. And then we have a certain amount of
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records, but those records are really cold and they really don't tell us about the student other
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than really their attendance and very high level view. And I know a large part of your discussion
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was on, well, do we share a spreadsheet? And what happens when we fat finger the spreadsheet? And who
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has access to this knowledge? And so I envision taking the tool that we built and going beyond
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just supporting one person at a time, but in a scenario where, you know, we're not, where the
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privacy concerns are taken care of and it's all within the school system. How cool would it be for,
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you know, a little Johnny or Jill to come into a class in second term? And the teacher
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doesn't pull up a record and look at this, you know, black and white ones and zeros about the record.
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But what if they could just dial a phone number and say, hey, you know, I've got the Johnny and
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his twin sister Jill in here in from, you know, the next baro over. Can you tell me about them?
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And then conversationally, they're going to be told about the highs, the lows, what they're
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having trouble with, what they really excel at. And I tell people, Jeff, through that our AI
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technology is 50,000 years old because back in the day before, you know, Gutenberg Press and before
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writing instruments, we told stories and it was human to human. That's how we've learned. So we're
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going back to the basics, the true basics of having that conversation and we're scaling it and we're
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giving the user this one on one time with this dynamic knowledge base that they can use
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when it suits them. They don't have to set an appointment. They don't have to call in at a certain
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time. But all that information is there when they need it. Yeah, I just, I love what you're talking
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about DC because that's exactly where I want to get to where the support is there. But the human
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still remains in the conversation. Now, you talked about going into the math class and saying,
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I really don't get this. And one of the real problems we have with students is that they,
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they don't articulate that. They act out with poor behavior. And that's typically how we find out
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that kids are struggling in school is that they have poor behavior to start.
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Now, if someone cannot articulate that they're struggling with math, this is an area where maybe that
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that phone call the teacher makes can help communicate that maybe not. But if there's a way for them
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to be able to get the help that they need without acting out behaviorally, then that would be ideal
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because that then lets everybody focus on learning and not focus on dealing with these negative
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behaviors that crop up when kids are doing things that to get out of the work or to avoid the
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difficult work. And this is a really important thing to all teachers and school leaders because
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that's usually what happens is that it becomes a behavior issue, especially if the kid can't
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communicate effectively what's really going on. And this is a huge problem in education that if
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we can find the solution to it, it'll be a life saver for everybody. The kids, the adults,
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everybody involved in the process. I agree to 100% teachers, guys, put in 12-hour days for a 7-hour
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class day and they're doing work before, during and after. And you would think it translates into
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one-on-one time with a student, but I think on one of your episodes, I think Alaska has like
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five different state tests and they're on different platforms. So so much time we teach to the test
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just out of, you know, we're kind of on hand as far as that we don't have time to actually teach.
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So yeah, absolutely. With a conversational tone, we can iterate back and forth through
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conversation much quicker than an email or records or maybe I make a phone call. Are these records
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correct or do you have more records about this student? And there's, you know, there's students
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with parents, there's students without parents, there's students that have helicopter parents,
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there's those students with parents that work all the time. So we have no idea what the student
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support system is back home. And absolutely, if we need to work and offer every possible avenue
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of communication because those, sometimes we just need to be heard and I point to, you know,
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Maslow's hierarchy, you know, we have certain needs that need to be met before we can even exist.
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And I believe that being heard is a very strong need in human civilization as an individual.
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And if we're just heard, that dispels and deflates and depressurizes a lot of those volatile situations.
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It definitely doesn't and people need to be heard no matter what. And a lot of times,
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kids in schools seek to be heard by their behavior when the other things they're trying to do
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aren't working or they don't have the capacity to do that. So this has been, this has been a great
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conversation. How can people get connected with you and with what you're doing with practical AI?
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Well, certainly. So I have a non-profit side. It's called AI for Autistics. I'll
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spelled out AI for Autistics.com that tells about a community that we build. Autistics have the
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lowest employment rate we we may have touched on earlier. So we guide and we teach on how to use
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AI to build software. And I know that came up in your conversation last week too.
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And I think you said use Replet to build, but there are several other ones out there. So
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this is a great tool for for those analytical and lean-minded, which a lot of us fall into.
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So we teach them how to build things and that's a no-cost. It's just it's just is there.
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On the for-profit side, the big realm of practical AI.app. So just like it sounds phonetically,
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practical AI.app, Apple parapair. And if you find my name on LinkedIn, please reach out,
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say hello. And I'd love to connect and help everyone in your audience.
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Yeah, very good. Well, this has been awesome. And I know we just barely scratched the surface.
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So thank you so much for taking the time to chat with me today. And please,
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everybody go check out practical AI.app or AIforautistics.com. Thanks again so much,
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D.C. for being part of transformative principle. Well, thank you. And thank you for having me here.
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Have a great day.
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Do you want to save time on prep work, increase student achievement for all of your students?
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Topics Covered
neurodiversity
artificial intelligence
AI for neurodiverse individuals
supportive AI environments
personalized learning
cognitive equity
voice interface technology
enhancing communication skills
AI in education
ADHD support tools
dyslexia assistance
autism advocacy
transformative education
student performance assessment
IXL learning platform