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To make processes more efficient by simplifying or automating tasks.
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Streamline operations
The ability of AI systems to detect and classify visual or data-based patterns without human input.
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Automated pattern recognition
A structured set of rules and standards ensuring that systems meet legal and ethical requirements.
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Compliance framework
The ability of an organization to deliver services effectively while minimizing waste of time and resources.
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Operational efficiency
Based on the analysis and interpretation of data rather than intuition or assumptions.
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Data-driven
Medical imaging technology that uses magnetic fields and radio waves to produce detailed images of the body.
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MRI (Magnetic Resonance Imaging)
A branch of AI that enables systems to learn from data and improve performance without explicit programming.
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Machine learning
The process of dividing medical images into smaller regions or structures for detailed analysis.
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Segmentation
Using data and algorithms to forecast outcomes, such as disease risks or treatment responses.
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Predictive modeling
A systematic error in AI outputs caused by biased or unrepresentative training data.
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Algorithmic bias
The amount of money needed to cover basic expenses such as food, housing, and transportation.
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Cost of living
The rate at which prices for goods and services rise over time.
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Inflation
Financial help from the government to reduce the cost of certain goods or services.
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Subsidy
A chain reaction where one event causes a series of other events.
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Domino effect
A rule that restricts how much landlords can increase rent.
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Rent limit
The cost of gasoline, diesel, or other energy sources used for transport.
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Fuel prices
To stay at the same level or speed as something else.
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To keep up with
Living on your own, without financial help from others.
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Independent living
Money kept aside for future use.
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Savings
Something absolutely necessary or very important.
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Essential
Something that has both positive and negative effects.
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Double-edged sword
To make something greater by adding to it; to enhance.
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To augment
Never done or known before.
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Unprecedented
A phenomenon where an AI model generates false, nonsensical, or fabricated information but presents it as factual.
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AI Hallucination
To invent or produce something false in order to deceive someone.
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To fabricate
Harm done to the good name, estimation, or public perception of a person or organization.
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Reputational damage
The fact or condition of being responsible for what you do and able to give a satisfactory reason for it.
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Accountability
A metaphor for an impact (like an environmental one) that is difficult to find, measure, or quantify.
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Elusive footprint
The capacity of a computer system to perform calculations and process data.
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Computational power
Involving methods that do not completely use up or destroy natural resources; able to be maintained at a certain rate or level.
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Sustainable
The process of introducing new ideas, methods, or products that significantly improve existing systems, technologies or markets.
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Innovation
The use of technology to perform tasks with minimal human intervention, often increasing accuracy and efficiency.
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Automation
A measure of how efficiently resources (such as labor and capital) are used to produce goods or services often linked to technological advancement.
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Productivity
The fundamental physical and digital systems that support economic activity – such as data centers, networks, transportation and energy grids.
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Infrastructure
The adaptation of products, services, or content to meet individual customer preferences or behaviors, often using AI-driven data analysis.
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Personalization
Responsibility for actions and decisions, especially regarding ethical and transparent use of AI systems in organizations.
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Accountability
The ability of a company, industry, or country to maintain or improve its position in the market by offering better products, efficiency or innovation.
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Competitiveness
The economic and social gap between those who have access to modern information and communication technologies and those who do not.
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Digital divide
An early model or sample used to test a concept or process, often before full-scale production or market release.
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Prototype
The ability to achieve maximum productivity with minimal wasted effort, time or resources.
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Efficiency
An amount of money that you pay regularly to receive a product or service.
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Subscription
An automated payment process where customers are charged on a regular schedule for products or services.
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Recurring billing
The feeling of being tired or overwhelmed by too many subscription payments.
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Subscription fatigue
The idea that people prefer to use things rather than own them permanently.
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Access over ownership
Written agreement between a business and a customer that limits when, how, and why either party can cancel an appointment.
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Cancellation policy
A company’s ability to keep customers over time through loyalty or satisfaction.
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Customer retention
The process of using digital technology to change business models and operations.
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Digital transformation
Financial or market conditions that influence consumer choices and business performance.
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Economic factors
Regular and expected income for a company from ongoing subscriptions.
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Predictable revenue
When customers continue to buy from or use the same company regularly.
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Consumer loyalty
The ability to easily change or adapt to different needs or situations.
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Flexibility
The reasons and personal choices behind consumers’ purchasing behaviour.
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Motives and preferences
pustka
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the void
radość
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exhilaration
kiełkować
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burgeoning
ramy
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confines
wyzwolony, rozkuty
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unshackled
niebezpieczeństwo
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precariousness
ustępować, opadać
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subside
być zagrożonym
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be at stake
wzruszający, przejmujący
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poignant
udostępnić
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facilitate
dziwactwo
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idiosyncrasy
surowy, nieugięty
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rigid
przemyślanie, rozmyślanie
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ruminating

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