In this episode of the Safety on the Edge podcast, we sit down with Anthony Aarons, an expert whose career journey has transitioned from high-risk environments like mining, oil, and gas directly into the world of artificial intelligence. With the rapid and sometimes terrifying pace of AI development, this conversation dives into the realities, emerging risks, and undeniable opportunities of integrating AI into safety management.
Anthony introduces the critical concept of “cognitive offloading,” exploring what happens to our visceral safety instincts and critical thinking when we hand our processes and decision-making over to machines. Through powerful analogies and real-world stories from the deep mines of South Africa to modern hospital wards, we discuss why human intuition and physical presence are irreplaceable assets in high-risk environments.
In this episode, we cover:
- The hazard of cognitive offloading and how offloading our thinking to AI may diminish our visceral sense of behavioral risk.
- Why artificial intelligence should be treated as a copilot rather than the pilot when it comes to organizational decision-making.
- The built-in sycophancy of Large Language Models and how their design to be pleasing prevents them from properly challenging our assumptions.
- The fundamental governance steps and building blocks organizations must have in place to deploy AI safely and effectively.
- The enduring necessity of human judgment and why the ultimate legal and moral liability for decisions will always rest with people.
Join us as we explore what we don’t know about AI and discuss how to preserve what makes us uniquely human in an automated world.
Catch Anthony live at the Safety on the Edge Conference in Baltimore! He will be delivering a 45-minute presentation and leading a deep-dive 2-hour workshop on March 7th. Secure your spot today at https://safetyontheedge.com